




























































T 






















































LAW 

O jP, 

PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


A SEARCH FOR THE HUMAN SOUL RE¬ 
WARDED BY DISCOVERY. The UNKNOWABLE 

known. An analysis of creation. Not 

SPIRITUALISM, NATURALISM. ELECTRICITY 
EXPLAINED. 


Written ai)ti Published by 

JOHN FOSTER, Lawyer. 

Avon, Illinois, 1889, 


“ Ye scenes of my childhood , whose love a recollection 
Embitters the present , compared with the past; 

IVhete science first dawn'd on the powers of reflection; 
And friendships were formed , too romantic to last." 


Copyright, 18S9, by John Foster, 

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED 


✓ 




‘fips oF C °Y3 * c 
c 0P yR, GH7 > 

SFP 14 

/ ($73 





r\^* 














Copyright 1889; by >John Foster. 

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 


Chas. C. Chain, Printer, 
Bushnell, Ills. 


eoisiTEiNTS- 


INTRODUCTION. 


I. 

THE SOLAR SYSTEM. 

II. 

THE DEVELOPMENT OF OUR EARTH. 

III. 

ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 

IV. 

ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


V. 

ORIGIN OF HUMAN RACES. 


VI. 

GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN 

BODY. 

VII. 

PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANATIONS AND 

THE HUMAN SOUL. 


CONCLUSION. 





Arc, Joan of. 

Aurora Borealis or Australis 

Atmosphere. 

Attraction. 

Algae... 

Alkali, Acid. 

Atoll. 

Ammonia. 

Animal. 

Anthracite Coal. 

Anther. 

Amalgamation of Plants. 

Animals, Origin of. 

Animal Soul. 

Animal Species. 

Arms.. 

Angleworm. 

Animal Kingdom. 

Alligator. .. 

Animal, Growth of.. 

Animal Brain, Horns.. 

Alcohol. 

Aroma of Pine Apple. 

Aroma of Animal. 

Angora Goat.. 

Anglo Saxon. 

Australian. 

Ape. 

Aztecs. 

Auricles. 


. 5 

. 22 

22 , 89 , 98 , 201 , 212 
.. 30 , 50 , 92 , 96 , 181 

... . 33 , 36 

. 37 

. 36 

. 38 

. 39 , 91 

. 41 

. 76 

. 87 , 137 

. 88 , 92 

. 90 , 249 

. 91 

. 95 

. 101 

. 103 

. 113 , 118,120 

. 116 

. 125 

.,. 126 , 210 

. 136 

. 137 

. 155 

. 158 

. 159 

. 160 

. 162 

. 175 


































II. 


Attraction of Gravitation.179 

Aura of Electricity..180, 224 

Aqueous Humor.194 

Auditory Nerves. 200 

Amitiveness, Alimentiyeness.233 

Affirmativeness. 234 

Affection.240 

Arsenic.248 

Burnt Rock.33 

Basaltic Columns, Blue Stone. 43 

Bark.75, 117 

Branch.76, 114 

Blossom......77, 105, 107, 117 

Brain.78, 126, 131, 132, 163, 178, 180, 214,257, 260 

Beet.*..81, 103 

Banana.82, 251 

Barley. 84 

Butternut, Buttercup.85 

Beetle.103 

Butterfly, Buffalo .105 

Bird.107,215 

Beak of Bird.108, 142 

Blacksnake.Ill 

Backbone.121 

Bear.125 

Bone.131, 132, 142, 168, 258 

Blood, Color of. 134, 175 

Butter.135 

Bull Dog.157 

Borneo.160 

Blood. .165, 174, 178, 207, 257 

Breath of Life.173 

Bladder..182, 248, 250 

Boil..210 

Bible Chronology.222, 252 

Brain, Copy of Twig . 230 

Comet.18 

Chalk.28 

Copper.29 











































III. 


Color.30 

Charcoal.31 

Coral.33, 35, 36, 63, 121 

Cell....34, 35, 38, 40, 74, 76, 90, 102, 114, 164, 166, 257 

Crinoid.36, 85, 251 

Coral Atoll.36 

Continents.37 

Clorine. 38 

Crystal.38, 139, 247 

Crystal of Salt, Coal.40 

Copy of Leaves. 44 

Crater.46 

Current of Ocean.'..49 

Cloud.01,248 

Corpuscle.74, 133, 167, 177, 186, 257 

Corolla, Calyx.76 

Cherry. 81 

Cabbage.82 

Corn. 82, 251 

Cob.83 

Clover. 85 

Cucumber....86, 105, 106 

Cornea of Eye. 89, 200 

Cell Lining.39, 90, 256, 259, 265 

Creation, Plan of..98 

Cricket. 103 

Caterpillar.105 

Cheese Bug.106 

Crow.109 

Copperhead...Ill 

Cobra-de-Capello.112 

Cayman.121, 160 

Camel.122, 124, 131 

Carnivorous Animals.125 

Cypress.129 

Decomposition, Conditions of.53 

Dandelion.86, 101 

Dynamo. 90 

Destruction of Species of Animal .97, 267 









































IV 


Destruction of Class of People...98,278 

Devil’s Darning Needle.103 

Deer...112, 131 

Dog.137, 159, 215, 237 

Digestion.164, 185, 204 

Duodenum.185 

Diamonds.189 

Dreams, Design...228 

Dust of the Earth. 231 

Dead Person.256 

Eliptic.9 

Earth. 14 

Earth’s Encasement.15 

Endosmosis, Exosmosis.30 

Electric Valves.47 

Earthquake. 48 

Exudations.66 

Earth’s Noddings.71 

Embryo . 98, 150, 270 

Eye of Bird.108 

Elephant.119, 122, 123 

Eye.120, 132, 169. 193, 196, 212, 239 

Egg. 138, 141, 250 

Esquimaux...155 

Electricity of body.:.178 

Enamel of Tooth.189 

Ear.212 

Experiments of Electricity on the Brain.215 

Eh ctrotyping.225 

Felspar.28 

Frost Forms.57, 224 


Fog. 

Faraday. 

Feelers. 

Fire Damp 
Footprints. 

Fruit. 

Fish. 

Fern. 


.61 

. 66 

.95 

.42 

.44 

.80, 135 

93, 121, 122 
.93 










































V. 


Fly. 105, 182 

Feather.110,137, 142, 177 

Fin.H3 

Ferocious Animal.125 

Fir.129 

Fox. 137 

Features of Race Immovable. 146 

Foetus. 150, 163 

Fat..164, 167 

Flesh.176 

Fever.207, 209 

Feeling..212 

Gallileo...5 

Gold.29, 30, 204 

Granite. 43 

Grasshopper. 56, 104 

Germinating.69, 81, 87 

Growth of Plant..73 

Gum.76, 136 

Grain. 86 

Genesis. :...88 

Germ of Life..89, 94 

Garter Snake.Ill 

Gavial.121 

Germ.133 

Gorilla. 152 

Goat... 155, 162 

Gullet. 164 

Glands.167, 258 

Gout. 16 g 

Gastric Juices.205 

Gravel in Bladder, Gall, or Kidney.139, 248 

Human Race, Improvement of. 3 , 97 , 267 

Human Soul.14, 99, 223, 252, 260, 265 

Heat.22, 26, 59, 120, 179, 207, 210 

Hydrogen.:...25, 91, 187 

Hill. 45 

Hair. 71 , n 7t 169, 177 

Herds Grass. 191 


l 


\ 









































VI. 


Horns. 

Hollyhock. 

Horned Snake. 

Hippopotamus. 

Hair, Heat of. 

Hemlock. 

Horse.. 

Hog. 

Hoof. 

Human Body. 

Hindoo. 

Headache. 

Heart. 

Head . 

Human Nature. 

Heaven. 

Hereditary. 

Iron. 

Insect. 

Ignus Fatuus. 

Ibex. 

Indian. 

Irish. 

Incas. 

Intestines. 

Involuntary Motions 

Intelligence. 

Imagination. 

Joan of Arc. 

Jupiter. 

Jaws. 

Jaguar. 

Judgment Record. 

Kernal of Corn. 

Kingfisher. 

Kangaroo.. 

Kidney. 

Kiss. 


104, 113, 120, 131 

.107 

.Ill 

.119 

. 120 

.129 

..130 

.131, 160 

.132 

.147, 171, 207 

.154 

.168 

.174, 257 

.215 

.237 

.261 

.267, 270 

.29 

..39, 104, 114, 141 

.65 

. 112 

.151, 161, 162 

.157 


.161 

.164, 182 

.182, 214 

.214 

.227 

.5 

.12 

104, 114, 164 

.162 

.223, 252 

.67, 83 

.110 

.159 

.177, 248 

.242 

.21, 25, 59 


Light 











































VII. 


Luster. 



..30 

Limestone. 


.43 

;, 45 

Lava . 



..47 

Lightning. 


.53, 

206 

Lightning Rod. 



..54 

Legs. 


104, 114, 

181 

Legs of Birds. 



.109 

Lily. 


• 

.110 

Lady Slipper. 



.112 

Lizard. 



.121 

Life. 



.122 

Lion. 



.125 

Lungs. 


.173, 

209 

Love. 


.179, 

214 

Locomotion. 



.181 

Lucidity of Thought. 



.232 

Moon. 


.14, 

, 17 

Mars, Archway for. 



..15 

Milky Way. 



...19 

Marl, Magnesium. 



..28 

Mica. . 


30, 32, 53 

,89 

Metals. 



..30 

Marble.. . 



..43 

Mountain... 



..45 

Mirage. 



..60 

Microscope. 


.74 

, 90 

Moss, Mushroom. 



. 85 

Medical Fraternity. 



..89 

Miller. 



105 

Mulberry. 



110 

Moose. 



111 

Marrow. 

.1-32, 106, 

1G8, 191, 

258 

Milk. 



133 

Mammal. 


.134, 

141 

Man.. 

.144, 

173, 231, 

267 

Mollusk. 


.145, 

177 

Mastiff. 



.158 

Madagascar. 



.160 

Muscle. 



167 











































VIII. 


Marrow of Nerves. 

Mind. 

Motions of Heart. 

Marrow of Bones. 

Motion. 

Momentum. 

Mirror, Picture in. 

Medicine.. 

Med u la. 

Memory. 

Magnetism, Mind Beading 

Molecular Motion.. 

Nitrogen. 

Natural Selection. 

Naja. 

Nerve. 

Nails. 

Negro. 

New Zealander. 

Narcotic.. 

Naturalism. 

Orbits... 

Oxygen. 

Oxyde of Magnesium. 

Oil. 

Ocean Current. 

Orange. 

Oais. 

Origin of Animals. 

Opium. 

Optic Nerve.....'. 

Oesophagus. 

Ovaries. 

Planet, Rotation of. 

Polypus. 

Prussic Acid. 

Petroleum. 

Peat. 

Plant.. 


.169, 188, 193 

173, 196, 214, 218, 223, 224 

.174 

.177 

.178, 181, 200 

.178 

. 199 

.206 

.217 

.222, 254 

.226 

.250 

.25, 90, 259 

.88 

.112 

.131, 164, 178, 193, 257 

.132, 169, 189, 192 

.152 

.160 

.,.205 

.262 

.4 

.25, 89, 187 

.29 

. 41 

.49, 140 

.82 

.84 

.88, 118 

..126 

..132, 192, 194, 200, 202 212 

.164 

. 165 

.15, 17 

.35, 63 

. 38 

.42 

..43 

.62, 71,72, 103, 122 










































IX. 



Plant, Electricity of. 

Protoplasm.. 

Pollen... 

Pistil. 

Parsnip. . 

Popping Corn. 

Pumpkin. 

Petrified Log. 

Plant Copy or Soul. 

Purifying the Air. 

Potato Bug. 

Plumage. 

Peacock. 

Poisonous Bite or Sting. 

Pine. 

Plant, Growth of.. 

Pear. 

Plant Assemblies, Pine Apple 

Panther. 

Polar Bear. 

Plant Form in Human. 

Pulsations.■. 

Pneumogastric Nerve. 

Phrenology. 

Photographing. 

Phonograph. 

Proudflesh. 

Punishment. 

Phantom Creations. 

Psychology.... 

Quartz. 

Rain. 

Rye. 

Reproduction of Plants. 

Reproduction of Animals. 

Root. 

Reindeer. 

Roach. 

Rooster. 


.65 

.67, 101 

.76, 78 

.76 

.81 

.88 

.86 

.89 

.90, 247, 265 

.94 

.106 

.108, 109 

.109 

.110 

.113,118, 129 

.116 

.119 

.136 

.151, 161 

.155 

.170 

.176, 187 

.186, 204 

.191 

197, 198, 224, 260 

.200 

.211 

.224, 254 

.245 

.258 

.28, 43 

.55 

.84 

.87 

.92, 148 

.104, 114 

.105 

.106 

.109, 142 










































X. 


Rattlesnake. 

Rhinoceros Rind.. 

Ribs... 

Rheumatism. 

Repairing Body.. 

Rewards. 

Rapport. 

Recollection. 

Solutions of Problems of Nature 

Solar System. 

Sun.. 

Stars. 

Saturn. 

Sound. 

Seasons. 

Silicon. 

Silver. 

Salt. 

Sodium. 

Sandstone. 

Soil. 

Snow. 

Snow Fly. 

Soul. 

Sun Spots...— 

St. Elmo’s Fire. 

Stamen. 

Seed. 

Sunflower, Squash. 

Survival of Fittest. 

Shale.. 

Scientists. 

Spontaneous Generation. 

Steps of Creation. 

Spider. 

Swallow. 

Snake. 

Sheep. 

Spruce. 


.110 

..119 

.121 

.168 

.210 

.224 

.226 

..253 

.4 

.8, 89, 139, 176 

.10, 54, 57, 59 

.16, 46 

.19 

.22, 201 

.22, 26 

.28 

.29 

.34 

.34, 38 

.43 

.45 

.55 

.56 

56, 90, 96, 247, 257, 259, 263 

.:.57 

.59 

.76, 77 

.80 

.86 

.88 

.89 

.89, 273 

..91 

.98 

.100 

.107 

.110, 111 

.•.Ill 

.129 










































XI. 


Skin. 115, 118, 1G9 

Sagacious Animal. 137 

Sex. 142, 268, 270 

Syphilis.150 

Sandwich Islander, San Domingo.160 

Stomach.164, 175 

Spinal Column.170 

Shell of Animal.177 

Strength.178 

Sinew.. 184 

Skull. 191 

Sight.196, 198, 239 

Scenery.200 

Smell... ..202, 213 

Saliva.205 


Senses. 

Sensitive Plates. 

Stone in a Bladder, Soda.... 
Spirit Sphere, Spirit World 

Sugar (Jane. 

Spirit. 

Spirit Mind. 

Spiritualism.. 

Spirit Control. 

Transparency. 

Trap Rock. 

Tree. 

Telegraph.. 

Tides. 

Thunder Head. 

Transit of Venus. 

Tissue. 

Turnip.. 

Taste. 

Tassel.. 

Toadstool . 

Thistle. 

Tail of Bird. 

Teeth. 


.212 

.220 

. 248 

.249, 260 

.251 

.257, 261 

.261 

.262 

.263, 265 

...31 

.,...42 

.45, 72 

.48, 137, 200 

.37, 49, 53 

.57 

.58 

65, 74, 115, 122,133, 166, 256 

.81, 103 

.81,203, 213 

.82, 251 

.85 

.86, 251 

.109 

.114, 120, 132, 169, 189 











































XII. 


Turtle. 

Tiger. 

Tusks. 

Tendon. 

Thoracic Duct.. 

Telephone. 

Tobacco. 

Thought. 

Traits. 

Umbilical. 

Ventrical of Earth, of Brain 

Volcano. 

Violet. 

Vegetable Kingdom. 

Vulture. 

Vitreous Humor. 

Volition. 

Veneration. 

Water.. 

Weight. 

Wind. 

Wheat. 

White Daisy, Walnut . 

Watermelon. 

Womb. 

Will. 

Wheat Bur. 

Wings of Bird. 

Whale. 

Wolf.. 

Willow. 

Wool. 

Wound. 

Wisest of Men. 

Yellow Apple. 

Zodiacal Light. 

Zoophytes. 


. ..121 

. 125 

. 131 

. 170 

. 175 

. 200 

. 205 

217 , 224 , 230 

. 267 

. 166 

. 44 , 255 

. 47 

. ....86 

. 103 

. 154 , 160 

. 194 , 200 

. 214 

. 235 

. 24 , 55 

. 53 

. 60 

. .....84 

. 85 

. 86 

.. 96 , 250 , 269 

. 100,182 

. 106 

. 109 

. 121 

. 125 , 137 

. 135 

. 137 , 177 

. 210 

. 227 

.Ill 

. 14 

. 36 








































X 


OR 


\ 






Twenty-five years ago I left the 
farm to become a lawyer. 1 have 
been in the practice over twenty years. 
I came from Kansas to Illinois for my 
health, and to renew my business. 
Unfortunately for me I find myself 
among people too good and intelli¬ 
gent to need the services of lawyers, 



2. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATTON. 

who deal only with the affairs of state, 
or state law. While it is starvation 

- I • _ 

for me, I will stand the sacrifice for 
the sight of the picture of the acts, 
conduct and example of a people who 
have made such grand progress in un¬ 
derstanding the Almighty’s affairs. 

For some time I have been poss¬ 
essed with the idea that I had some¬ 
thing to say of benefit to thoughtful 
people. Nothing to offend but some¬ 
thing to teach, something to lighten 
up life’s causeway with new and bet¬ 
ter knowledge of the affairs that sur¬ 
round us. And if I am not permitted 
to be an expounder of' the laws made 
by man, I seek for a better knowledge 
of the laws of nature; believing that a 
teacher of the laws of nature may be 
better appreciated than the lawyer 
who expounds the law as made and 
enforced by man of this day and age. 
Such law is only made necessary for 


INTRODUCTION. 


3. 

the same reason that a chain, iron 
cage, or death, is necessary for a wild 
beast to prevent it from destroying an 
innocent child. State laws are only 
required because of the vicious dispo¬ 
sitions of some people. If these vic¬ 
ious dispositions could be lopped off, 
we would not have a penitentiary, jail, 
poor house, brothel, or insane asylum. 

“ ’Tis a consummation devoutly to be wish’d.” 

Is it possible to attain such a glo¬ 
rious change? I think it is. If not 
in our time, in the time of a genera¬ 
tion to be born in the near future. 
One way would be to change the evil 
dispositions of men by precept and 
example, but there are those who will 
insist that that has been tried without 
success for Lo! these two thousand 
years or more. Another way would 

J *• 

be to kill all wild beasts, dogs, cats, 

and vicious animals and let the laws 

of God and nature be obeyed. But I 

•/ 


4. LAW, OR !> HOLOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

shall not discuss the question further 
here. 

While my views are radically (lift- 

* ' i *' 

erent from those believed to be truth 
by many, they are all thought to be 
good, beautiful and of great practical 
benefit. 

When it is stated that the discover¬ 
ies of the wonders of photography; 
the discovery of the character of the 

%J 

orbits of the planets and moons, and 
the general features of the solar sys¬ 
tem; the discovery of the circulation 
of the blood; the construction of a wire 
in a way to reveal the fact that the 
sun can pour electricity on the earth 
from it’s own current; and the discov- 
ery of the fact that all the rock of the 
earth is merely a result of mud and 
sand, that is hardened by the decom¬ 
posing influence of the earth,—are all 
the solutions of the problems of nature 
in the possession of the human fami- 


INTRODUCTION. 


ly, it will be noticed what a reservoir 
of unexplored new knowledge in na¬ 
ture must exist. 

And to state propositions, although 
entirely opposite to your own views, 
if done in a respectful manner with 
the intention I have expressed, ought 
not to excite your opposition or ridi¬ 
cule. 

For stating that the earth moved 
around the sun, Gallileo was con¬ 
demned to abjure such error, to be 
imprisoned at the inquisition during 
pleasure, and to recite once a week, 
for three years the seven penitential 
psalms. 

Joan of Arc, at the age of 13, spoke 
of visions that she saw and voices that 
she heard, and believed herself the 
subject of supernatural visitations; and 
later believed herself called upon to 
deliver her country and crown her 
king, which she accomplished. She 



was tried by the university of Paris, 
and convicted of sorcery and witch- 
craft, for which she was burned at the 
stake in the market place of Rouen 
and her ashes thrown into the Seine. 

But such things occured in 1633 
and 1430. They would receive a fair¬ 
er consideration now. While I expect 
no such favorable notoriety, I do hope 
that the statements 1 shall make in 
regard to natural affairs will receive 
some notice, thought, and discussion 
from the people. 

Unfortunately for the advancement 
of the world in an understanding: of 
what surrounds us, there are men 
who are attempting to shackle thought 
by asserting that man can not under¬ 
stand the affairs of nature. For in¬ 
stance, that no man is able to tell the 
commencement of our earth, the sun, 
moon or stars, or of what substance 
they were composed before they were 



IX PRODUCTION. 


moulded into their present shape. 
Suppression of thought is necessary 
in order to oppress, and thus in some 
manner to rob the human race. The 
capacity of a human mind to investi¬ 
gate, experiment, to produce or bring 
to notice new knowledge of good and 

benefit to the world "can only be mens- 

* 

ured by its maker, the Almighty God. 
Any attempt at such measurement by 
a human being is an attempt to super¬ 
sede God. It will fail. Let thought 
be unimprisoned. Let it dwell upon 
the most common things we use and 

CJ 


have before our eyes every day 



light, sunrise, day, atmosphere, sky, 
clouds, wind, rain, our earth in all its 
blossomed beauty and glory; sunset, 


twilight, darkness, stars, comet, mete¬ 
or and moon. Let it grasp without 
fear the fact that throughout all na¬ 
ture, a single fluid is doing the 


Almighty' 


s 


work; that it is capable of 


8. 


LAW,Oil PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


being constantly condensed, harden¬ 
ed, and of again being resolved into 
its former condition of fluid; that 
without it there can be no life, growth 
or intelligence. It is called electricity. 
Consolidated it is that portion of the 
eye we look through, the cell of a 
plant, animal or human being, the 
mica in the stove through which the 
fire is seen so plainly. It is the act¬ 
ual crust or commencement of our 
earth, and a piece of it is found upon 
every square mile of the earth. 


I. 

THE SOLAR SYSTEM. 

The first condition of our earth, 
the sun, the other planets, their moons, 
the stars, aerolites and asteroids, was 
a mass of electricity, only in length 
and breadth the shape of a hen’s egg. 





THE SOLAR SYSTEM. 


9. 


It was given a constant motion in an 
elliptical form, and a constant conden¬ 
sation. This simple operation affect¬ 
ing the condition of such a substance, 
capable of a general change in its con¬ 
dition, gave the universe its creations. 
On all the aspects of this system an 
unmistakable character of evidence 
of this work is seen. It is observed 
in the shape of every orbit, the 
course of the earth and other plan¬ 
ets around the sun, and of the moons 
around the planets, in the motion of 
each to-day, and in the shape of all 
stellar creations. 

Astronomers state that the orbits 
of planets and moons are elliptic; that 
the son is nearer one end of the plan¬ 
ets orbit than the other; and the plan¬ 
ets in a similar position of the moon’s 
orbit: that the earth and other planets 
revolve around the sun and the moons 
a round the planets. Such would not 


10 . 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


have been the fact if this condensing 
mass of matter had been given a cir¬ 
cular motion. It would have been a 
single round ball whirling like a top. 

A current of any fluid can be 
moulded into different forms if given 
the right direction when condensing. 
If caused to move in an egg-shaped 
circuit it will gorge and huddle into a 
mass at the smaller end, as ice or saw¬ 
dust will in an eddy or bend in a riv¬ 
er, and the loose portions will rush 
past the main gorged portion. All 
that made the sun the central planet 
of the system was the loose mass of 

%J 

this whirling substance rushing around 
the packed mass faster than the {tack¬ 
ed mass could whirl. The greater 
condensation of this mass at the cen¬ 
ter caused the sun. The consolidated 
mass of the sun caused a resistance 
to the general mass of this substance, 
and a separation from it. The con- 


THE SOLAR SYSTEM. 


11. 


traction of this mass caused a cell, as 
all contracting round bodies do. Ev¬ 
ery organization in nature that be¬ 
comes condensed by contraction is 
hollow. Every crystal, cell of a plant 
or animal, grain of sand, bone of any 
considerable size, shell of the ocean, 
and the head of every animal and 

t/ 

human creature, is hollow. 

The mass separated from the sun, 
and by reason of such separation was 
given sufficient increase of velocity to 
resist the attraction of the sun, and 
give this ring: of matter a center of at- 

c> CJ 

traction of its own. A whirling body 
of any liquid capable of condensing 
will create a central body of the great- 
er portion of its substance, as soap, 

glue, oil, sugar, salt, or roil of water. 
This was the cause of the greater size 


of the sun. The original mass of the 
substance was shaped like an orbit or 
hen’s egg, much broader at the center 


12. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

than at the edges. This caused a 
ring, obtained by a separation of the 
greater mass in the middle, to be 
broader at the point or edge, where 
the separation took place. Only a 
repetition of separation, or causing the 
sun to be made, could take place in 
the ring, in order to give Jupiter an 
existence. In this form of this ring, 
and in the consolidation of its sub¬ 
stance at its central point, the cause 
is found for the existence, size and lo¬ 
cality of the great, planet Jupiter. It 
is located at the very spot, and is ex¬ 
actly the size that the law of consoli- 

t J 

dation or construction of a planet 
from the matter of this ring would ne- 
cessitate. 

All that prevented Jupiter having 
as many moons as Saturn was the 
greater capacity of the substance of 
its ring for consolidation into a com¬ 
mon body. All that gave our earth a 


THE SOLAR SYSTEM. 


U°>. 


beautiful moon was the capacity of 
the condensing matter of the earth’s 
ring to consolidate into one globe. 

When the ring that made Jupiter 
was given an existence, there was a 
ring on each side, the only possible 
result of the creation of a central ring. 


All that gave existence to the planets 
on the outside of Jupiter, that is, Sat¬ 
urn, Uranus, Neptune, and on the in¬ 
side, namely, Mars, Earth, Venus, Mer¬ 
cury,—was the division and moulding 
of a ring on each side of this great 


planet Jupiter. In this fact, and the 
necessity of the division of one ring 
into three, the product of the process 
described, and the only possible result 
of its operation, all the evidence want¬ 


ed is found that there are no other 
planets than those discovered, and 
that every object in the solar organi¬ 
zation has been found except a ring 
of meteors or little planets between 


14. LAW, OK PHOTOGRAPHS OF C REATION. 

Earth and Mars, and the rings of still 
smaller bodies around the planets and 
moons. 

A gorging of the substance in the 
gorge of the orbit converted a mass 
of soft mica into our globe. On the 
bow of twilight there is a view of the 
very object that enclosed our earth’s 
soft substance on one side, when it 
was being moulded in the point of its 
orbit. It is called the Zodiacal light, 
and it is a perfect copy of a shore or 
sphere in which the souls of mortals 
can find their everlasting abode. The 
other side of this great and transpar¬ 
ent object that controlled all the 
moulding operations of our planet, is 
so far in the skv it cannot be seen. 

On the surface of every ring from 
which a planet was constructed, a 
crust of the condensing substance was 
created, and it was in all respects an 
operation like the construction of the 


THE SOLAR SYSTEM. 


15 . 


cornea of the eye, or the formation of 
ice upon the surface of water. 

No moulding could have taken 
place unless a covering of some ma¬ 
terial existed on all sides of a ring of 
substance. The occasional appear¬ 
ance of the archway on which the 

• / 

planet Mars rolls around the sun, and 
the constant appearance of the arch- 
wav on which the earth is rolled, 
called Zodiacal light, are suggestive 
proof of this covering. 

As sure as the planet goes around 
the sun, and rolls on an axis, the plan¬ 
et is given a construction to roll on. 
No rotary motion of a planet would 
be possible unless a fulcrum was ob¬ 
tained by a thing on which it rests. 
Our earth’s encasement actually rolls 
around the sun on a foundation, as a 
ball rolls on a floor. 

What is the earth’s encasement? 
If the white of an egg was out, leav- 


1G. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


ing only the yolk, and the shell caus¬ 
ed to revolve rapidly, the yolk would 
be lifted into the center. This is an 
idea of the earth’s encasement. A 
rapid revolution of the encasement of 
a small planet lifts it into the center 
of the encasement and causes it to re¬ 
volve on its axis as the encasement 
rotates. The earth, moon and stars 
are so encased, and the encasement 
was made, as the foundations for the 
planets to roll on were made. The stars 
are balls of mica, held near the equil¬ 
ibrium of the earth’s and sun's cur¬ 
rents of electricity, and given a slight 
revolution around the earth in the 
same direction as that of its moon. 
They make the revolution in about 
the time an astronomer, with more 
money than understanding, is claiming 
our solar system is revolving, that is. 

in about twenty five thousand vears. 

•' */ 

The reason of the stars being sca ttered 


THE SOLAR SYSTEM. 


17. 


is the free flow of a thin ring of this 
condensing substance in the point 
of the earth's orbit without huddling 
together. You can scatter a hand¬ 
ful of diw sand, if it was mud it would 
stick together. 

The perpetual rotation of a planet 
originated in the whirl of a gorged 
mass of substance, and so did the con¬ 
struction of the orbit and coursing of 
every moon. The moon does not roll 
around, for the want of a floor to roll 
on. The moon is carried around the 
earth by the earth’s current of elec- 
tricity, as though a hand was stretched 
out from the globe and held the moon 
on it. That the planets are rolled 
around the sun upon a foundation, is 
conclusively proved by the unerring 
rules of mathematics. 

Divide the circumference of the or¬ 
bit by the circumference of the planet; 
the result will be the number of revo- 


18. LAW, OB PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

lutions, and if the same as the known 
revolutions it is demonstrated that it 
actually rolls around the central body 
on a foundation. To get the time of 
rotation, divide the hours of the period 
of revolution by the number of revolu¬ 
tions, or divide the circumference of 
the planet by the distance it moves 
in an hour. 

Only a common force is exerted to 
perform both motions of the planets. 
The velocity of each planet corres¬ 
ponds to the degree of the velocity of 
this force, and the degree of the ve¬ 
locity corresponds to the distance of 
the planet from the sun, the origina¬ 
tor of the force. 

The comet is only an attempt to 
create another planet in the current 
of electricity that sweeps between two 
existing planets. A partial consolida¬ 
tion of a portion of this current, at a 
point in its center, like that performed 


THE SOLAR SYSTEM. 


19 


in the creation of all the original rings 
from which the planets and moons 
were derived, is what is constructing 
a comet at some point of the system 
every day. As soon as a part of the 
current is consolidated sufficiently to 
offer a resistance to the sweep of the 
current, it is destroyed bv the current 

/ t/ */ 

that is moving. 

When a current of electricity of the 
sun burns the shell of mica or star 
through, it consolidates and is attract¬ 
ed to the earth. Its velocity in fall¬ 
ing ignites it and sometimes bursts it. 
This is an astronomer’s ball of fire, or 
sun. 

Saturn, with its three rings and 
eight moons, has a resemblance to 
the whole system of which it is a 
part The Milky Way is a band of 
light created by a multitude of stars 
like the halo of a gas or lamp light 
seen at a distance. 


i 


20. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


What makes the light and heat of 
the earth ? 

Contemplate what is called a sun’s 

rays. You will find no foundation 
•/ 

for the claim that the sun is a ball of 
fire that never burns up and can send 
heat millions of miles. No expla¬ 
nation of the fact that the appearance 
of light is only on the bodies beyond 
the earth, that is, on bodies, not be¬ 
tween the sun and earth, while as to 
bodies between earth and sun it only 
lights up that side towards the sun. 
Again, every one who has been up 
high mountains, or up in a balloon, 
found that the further they went up 

a/ | 

from the earth the colder it was. The 

currents of electricity that are cours- 

1 / 

ing into the poles of the earth and out 
at its equator, and as far towards the 
poles as plants are growing, have 
made and are making the entire de¬ 
velopment and growth of the earth. 


THE SOLAR SYSTEM. 


21. 


Light is a, concussion or 


vibration 


of the current of the earth’s electricity, 

with the current that is sweeping 

around the whole solar system. This 

*/ 

current is a creation of the sun, and it 
is given the same direction of motion. 
When two such currents meet, a spark 
or flash of the concussion is seen, and 
if the currents are great it will produce 
lightning. The only cause of the 
lierht is the vibration or concussion 

cj 

of the currents on the eye, and the 
light is an effect of the vibration on 
the organs of sight. The eve is so 
affected by this intense action of the 


electricity in the atmosphere, that it 
will experience a slight concussion of 
the current of the optic nerve, and the 
concussion of this current is commu¬ 
nicated to the brain. To produce a 

vibration of a current of electricity of 

»/ 

the atmosphere, a concussion of two 
or more currents must occur. This is 




LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


all that is ever clone to create a light. 
If the vibration is sufficient to vibrate 
the atmosphere, sound is produced. 
When it is sufficient to vibrate the 
water or vapor of the atmosphere, 
heat is produced. If the concussion 
of electrical currents could take place 
within a vessel exhausted of all air and 
moisture, the brightest light without 
heat would be produced. This is 
shown bv the nearly airless globes 

i J t/ ( J 

of the incandescent electric lights. 
An Aurora Borealis or Australis 
is the increased current of elec¬ 
tricity passing into the earth at its 
poles. In sweeping through the at¬ 
mosphere at this focus it creates a 
light by its vibration in the atmos- 
phere, similar to the sunlight. 

The changes of the seasons are 
caused by the different positions of 
the moon in its orbit. There are some 
other natural causes. 


THE SOLAR SYSTEM. 


23. 


If a thin vessel of water, a milk pan 
or the like, and a deeper one like a 
wash boiler are set in the sun, the wa¬ 
ter in the shallow vessel, after a time, 
will be warm while that in the deeper 
one will be cold. 

A greater difference in the depth 
of the water created by the growth of 
continents produced this change in 
temperature of both northern and 
southern hemispheres. Only a few 
degrees higher temperature is wanted 
in cold countries to convert them into 
temperate conditions of air and water, 
and a few more degrees to render 
them tropical. 

All that makes the earth warmer at 
the equator and at the regions of the 
earth where the oceans are broadest 
is the shallowness of the water in such 
parts of the globe. The greater the 
depth of the water the greater resis¬ 
tance to the flow of the earth’s current 


24. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF GREAT I ON. 


of electricity. 

The moon is causing all the changes 
of seasons by assisting the sun ’in 
warming more of the earth than its 
own power can accomplish. 

The moon is known to approach 
the earth as it crosses each continent 
and the earth also to move towards 
the moon, and to advance into the sky 
as it crosses every large body of wa¬ 
ter. The distance it advances into the 
sky is in proportion to the depth of 
the water it crosses. 

The currents of electricity of the 
earth and moon burn up the atmos¬ 
pheric gases between the two bodies, 
making a causeway for the moon to 
approach the earth and as these cur¬ 
rents become weak the gases rush in 
and crowd the moon towards the skv. 

This action of electricitv is called 

> 

gravitation. 

O 

Water was created as it is created 


TTIE SOLAR SYSTEM. 


now. The substance is oxygen and 
hydrogen held together by electricity. 

Oxygen is a mass of very fine cells 
of perfectly transparent concentrated 
electricity. A current of electricity 
is bearing each ball in the atmosphere. 

Hydrogen was created by burning 
a portion of the oxygen of the at¬ 
mosphere into a smoke by a current 
of electricity passing through it. 

There was no nitrogen until after 
the decay of plants. 

Atmosphere is oxygen suspended 

in electricity. It is a continued con- 

densation of the electricity of the so- 

lar system. 

•/ 

A nearer approach of a blaze of 
light to the poles of the earth in the 
moon’s coming is the cause of 

o 

changes of season. 

The light of the sun, moon, or any 
planetary body, is caused by the clash 
or concussion of the electric current 


26. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

of the sun with that of the earth, 
moon, or any planetary body. Its 
appearance through the vapor is the 
more intense portion of the earth’s or 
moon's electric light. We do not see 
the planet. If you can look directly 
at the sun you will f ind it to appear 
like a lighted up wall with a stove 
pipe hole through it. The moon is a 
faint appearance of the same kind. 

We do not see the planet sun or 
moon. It is this more intense center 
of light on the side of the planet that 
is seen. 

When this vibration is in a vapor of 
the atmosphere a heat is produced. 
The changing of the moon’s orbit 
changes the location of this light and 
heat in the relation to the earth. This 
causes a change of seasons. The 
changing of the earth's encasement in 
its revolution around the sun causes 
a change in the moon’s orbit. It is 


THE DEV ELOPE M ENT OF OUR EARTH. 


27. 


other phenomena of planetary elec¬ 
tricity. 


IT. 

THE DEVELOPMENT OF OUR 

EARTH. 


The first hardened condition of the 
earth was a ball of mica or consolida¬ 
ted electricity. Proof convincing to 
your minds of the truth of this propo¬ 
sition, as all others I am stating, will 
appear in proportion to the interest I 
can create in von to know all I shall 
state. 

A coursing of the circuitous current 
of electricity given the earth for its 
unfoldment, from its interior to the 
surface and into the interior again at 
its poles, is the cause of the making of 
everything that ever was or ever will 

a J CA 






28. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


be upon the face of the earth. 

Electricity in constant motion is 
able to decompose any substance. 

The current in coming through the 
earth’s crust partly burns the mica, 
and this decomposition is silicon. 

A small amount of decomposition 
of silicon or mica a little more decom¬ 
posed, produces quartz. 

In the decomposition of quartz a 
substance is produced called felspar. 
It is a still further decomposition of 
mica. 

In a decomposition of felspar or 
further decomposition of mica, marl 
is produced. 

In the decomposition of marl, or 
further decomposition of mica, chalk 
is produced. 

In the decomposition of chalk, or 
further decomposition of mica, we 
have a substance from which magne¬ 
sium is obtained. 


THE DEV ELOPE M ENT OF OUR EARTH. 


21). 


A decomposition of magnesium 
produces oxide of magnesium, which 
is next to gas in condition. 

These substances are made by a 

t/ 

constant decomposition of the crust 
of the earth, and these substances and 
their modifications bv water, air and 
the pressure of the earth’s attraction, 
are all the substances, on or in the 
earth’s crust. 

Gold is produced by pressing mica 
till it is partly burned up by the pres¬ 


sure. 

Silver is constructed by great pres¬ 
sure of chalk. 

Copper is produced by pressing the 
mica partly decomposed. 

Iron is produced by pressing quartz 
and the undecomposed mica in it. The 
other metals are only compressed 
chalk, pure or impure, or the produc¬ 
tions from chalk, called barium, stron¬ 
tium, silicates of magnesia, and sev- 


30. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

eral others which are only chalk in 
different degrees of decomposition. 

Every metal is constructed by 
pressing some substance hard enough 
to cause a change in the condition of 
the substance. 

Gold is found only in the interior 
of quartz that has contracted while 
cooling. 

Every particle of mica that is 
burned in the act of pressing will be 
attracted to another burning portion. 
The attraction of similar substances 
in the course of a chemical change of 
the substance is an operation of mag¬ 
netic or electrical attraction called 
endosmosis or exosmosis 

Every metal that is given a luster 
by rubbing is found only in a rock 
that has contracted while cooling. 

The color is according to the de¬ 
gree of decomposition. The chemical 
action of the substance is the cause 


THE DEVELOPMENT OF OUR EARTH. 


31. 


of the color. In every substance that 

I/ 

is not transparent, there is a constant 
decomposition of its particles. Every 
ore, gold and other metals, change 
their luster in a short time bv the de- 
composition of their particles. The 
luster is a burning of the metal by the 
action of electricity. 

Gold will be of different color when 
there is a substance mixed with it 
which prevents its combustion. The 
cause of the transparency of any ob¬ 
ject is the decomposed condition of 
electricity. 

Charcoal is black because every 

t / 

particle of it is stopped giving the at¬ 
mosphere a current of electricity. 

Colors are the effects of the decom¬ 
position. With eyes covered with a 
thick cornea only certain brilliancies 
of color can be seen. 

In proof of the assertion that the 
current of the earth’s electricity that 


LAW,'OH PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


is passing into the earth at the poles 
and coming out around the surface of 
the earth wherever it is not closed by 
cold, has made all the changes that 
have taken place in the crust of the 
earth, I point out the following facts: 

The crust of mica and the substan¬ 
ces derived from its decomposition 
will be found to have been operated 
upon by the sweep of this current. 

It will appear that mica has been 
thrown to the surface of the globe 
and in different degrees of decompo¬ 
sition. The position of this mica will 
show that it was once in the earth and 

lay beneath the substances in the 

•/ 

crust and on top of the globe; that in 
coming to the surface it was broken 
into pieces and the scales are distinct¬ 
ly presented; that where mica is seen 
there is considerable upheaval and a 
great amount of other substances 
thrown to the surface. The beds of 


THE DEVELOPEMENT OF OUR EARTH. 


33. 


mica are always found where the up¬ 
heaval was so comparatively small 
that the volcanic character of rock 
was not created. Burnt rock was 
produced by the heat generated by 
the outbursts of volcanoes. On all 
parts of the earth where only small 
ranges of mountains are created, and 
on all the summits and slopes of vol¬ 
canic ranges more or less mica is 
found. It is found in the shape of sil¬ 
icon, quartz and felspar, and these are 
the result of volcanic action. In all 
these rock or substances a small por¬ 
tion of mica is still seen in the shape 
of scales. 

The shell of mica, constituting the 
first condition of our globe, was cov¬ 
ered with water when the process of 
development began. 

From a coral or alga organization 
all the organization^ of plants and 
animals came into existence. And in 


34. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

V 

the creation of continents only a great 
amount of coral was constructed. 

The discharge of the earth’s current 
through its crust causes the corals 
growth. It is a construction of cells 
precisely like the cells of the plant and 
animal, except that the cells of coral 
by reason of the time of their growth, 
are more consolidated 

A coral stalk is calcareous by the 
action of salt water. 

Salt of any body of water is water 
mixed with the ashes of burnt mica. 

It is the burned portions of the cells 
of the human or animal body that af¬ 
fords the socalled sodium for creating 
salt in the urine. The cells of all or¬ 
ganizations and the one that first con¬ 
stituted the globe are alike except in 
size and condensation. 

As some evidence that the world 
was once a ball of mica, note that in 
its decomposition sodium is created 




THE DEVELOPEMENT OF OUR EARTH. U. 

and mixed with water. The waters of 
its oceans or bladders are as salt as a 
wolf s. In the body of every plant 
and animal sodium is created in the 
same way and their bladders are con¬ 
taining salt urine. 

The cells of the coral as fast as 
formed are partly decomposed by the 
salt and water making them incapable 
of further decomposition. A polypus 
is a bud of a coral, different from that 
of the plant only in the absence of 
leaves. The electricity in its escape 
through the coral is consolidating as in 
the construction of plant and animal 
cells. In its escape through the pores 
it is consolidated in the shape of spear 
points, or in the shape of the current 
itself after it is out of the pores of the 
coral. These spear shaped construc¬ 
tions are a species of blossom; in 
these incipient beginnings of the 
growth of a branch, or an other cir- 


36. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


cle of growth, the so called coral in¬ 
sect is found. They are no more an 
insect than any other blossom. There 
is not a single manifestation of ani¬ 
mal life in them. Above the parallel 
of latitude 38 or 40 there is no growth 
of coral now. All that grew are con¬ 
verted into rock. All that now grow 
are algae and crinoids. The water is 
too fresh and cold now for coral 
growth. Coral is but a plant calcined 
by the action of salt. Algae, crinoids 


and zoophites are corals without the 
calcareous character. Where the wa¬ 
ter is cold there is a greater tendency 
of salt to crystalize. This is the rea¬ 
son for bodies of salt above coral 
growth. The great bunches of coral 

are by reason of the duration of the 
earliest. 

A coral atoll is the top of a coral 
mountain, caused by the growth of 
coral under water, and given a fringe 


THE DEVELOPEMENT OF OUR EARTH 


37. 


around the border of the more level 
part, except opposite the flow of the 
tide, where the ebbing of the tide will 
cause the interior to be drained. 

The fringe is a small range of 
mountains caused by a current of elec¬ 
tricity breaking the coral rock. All 
continents and lands of the earth are 
and have been a coral creation, given 
borders of the character of mountains. 
As the coral is grown a deeper water 
about it is made. The water resists the 
flow of the current from the earth and 
it seeks the easier avenue out of the 
coral which causes the measure of co¬ 
ral growth. All bluffs, mountains and 
other elevations of soil are grown in 
a similar way and as the increase of 
the growth of grass around a stone. 

Alkali is a portion of the water of 
the earth, and a small amout of ash¬ 
es of anv burned substance. Acid is 
«/ 

the same, with particles of an unburn- 


/ 

38. LAW. OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

f \ B 

ed substance added. 

Alkali can be given different con¬ 
ditions by the greater decomposition 
of the substance that is mixed with 
the water. 

Common ashes by common com¬ 
bustion is common alkali. Burned 
by a blow pipe is ammonia. Burned 
by electricity is chlorine. A still 
greater decomposition by a current 
of electricity applied to chlorine, and 
then restoring it to water, produces 
prussic acid which yields its current 
of electricity to whatever it touches. 
The constant action of electricity in 
water constitutes the active character 
of acid and alkali. 

A crystal of any substance is made 

by the attraction of sodium to a cell 
•/ 

of a plant or animal; an accumulation 
of such makes a mass of crystals. The 
mass is made by the attraction of crys¬ 
tals to each other. Every cell of a 

•/ 


THE DEVELOPEMENT OF OUR EARTH. 


39. 


plant or animal is given a lining of 
the same material the cell is composed 
of, and when the other part is de¬ 
stroyed the lining still exists. Around 
such linings, whatever is sufficiently 


decomposed, will be attracted; this 
creation is a crystal. If the water or 
atmosphere is without either such lin¬ 
ings or without the decomposed sub¬ 
stance, there will be no crystalizing. 
When such lininers and substance ex¬ 


ist in sufficiently warm water or at¬ 
mosphere a current of electricity pass¬ 
es from one open side to the other 
and an animal is produced. If the 
lining of one cell it will be an insect. 
If a tissue of cells it will be a worm. 
If the whole organization of such cells, 
as it will be if the cells are not separ¬ 
ated, it will be an animal of the size 
of the plant or greater. 

The process of growth is the same 
in the least insect that it is in the an- 


40. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


iraal. It is the current attracting to 
the interior of the cell, a portion of 
the sodium or decomposed substance, 
in the water or air, and decomposing 
it further by the burning of such atoms. 
The current generated by this decom¬ 
position is pressed to the surface of 
the animal and consolidated into 
cells. 

Only in the fact of the cell lining 
being in warm water or warm air is 

the animal produced instead of the 
crystal. 

Every crystal of salt is formed 
around the lining of a cell of coral. A 
clump of such crystals are shaped like 
a clump of coral. 

Coal is coral burned to a char. 
Coal is a part of the coral fringe that 
girdled each atoll except certain coal 
beds in the great prairies. In the up¬ 
heaval caused by the increased cur¬ 
rent of the earth’s electricity made by 


THE DEVELOPEMENT OF OUR EARTH. 


41. 


the resistance of water, along- the co¬ 
ral fringe or mountain, to its outflow, 
a great smashing of coral took place. 
The coral continent was increased by 
additional coral creations and upheav¬ 
als and in the greater burning of co¬ 
ral rock a coal was produced. 

All coal is hard or soft, according 
to the degree of decomposition. An¬ 
thracite is burned but little and is 
nearly as hard as the coral rock. 

Every oil is the separated cells of 
the plant or animal organization in 
a mobile condition. Plant cells will 
give oil of the character of glycerine; 
animal cells of that of grease. The 
difference is by reason of the different 

1/ 

size of the cells. The plant oil is 
lighter. If the cells or oil are given a 
wash of coal dust the coal will con¬ 
vert the oil into powder, when it is 
dry the combustion is so rapid the 
whole mass will explode. 



42. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

Fire damp in coal mines is the ex¬ 
plosion caused by the coal dust giv¬ 
ing the oil an explosive character. 
Fire damp is what the combination of 
the two words suggests, a fraud on 
common sense. Every explosion of 
this character is a conversion of the 
cells of petroleum or coral cells into 
electricity. There is no such thing as 
fire damp. 

Petroleum is made out of the cells 
of coral separated by a current of 
electricity which operated to rend the 
rock and decompose the coral to con¬ 
siderable extent. The separation of 
the cells of coral, like those of the 
plant and animal, will produce oil. 
Bituminous coal gets its oily charac¬ 
ter by a separation of some of the co¬ 
ral cells. Such coal is light on ac¬ 
count of greater decomposition. 

A little less heat than was required 
to convert coral rock into coal, con- 


THE DEVELOPEMENT OF OUR EARTH 


43. 



structed trap rock. 

Quartz is only found on the top of 
high mountains. It is a shining mix¬ 
ture of mica and coral. 

Granite is the puddling in a volca¬ 
no of a mass of coral and mica. The 
mica would have been made into gold 
if the pressure had been great enough. 

Limestone, sandstone, marble, ba¬ 
saltic columns and the approach to 
rock called chalk, have been more de¬ 
composed than those described. They 
are elevated courses of decomposed 
coral. On the slopes of many small 
mountains a sand stone is discovered, 
and when dug to a little extent it be¬ 
comes blue stone or trap rock. On 
the top it is soil. 

Peat is decomposed soil given a 
dark color by the continued accumu¬ 
lation of burned plants. Prairies are 
peat beds partly filled with debris and 
coloring of plants. Peat is plant 




I 



LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


44 . 

charcoal and coral charcoal. 

The so called sandstone on which so 
many footprints, copies of leaves and 
other evidences of the existence of 
animals of long ago, are a conglome¬ 
rate of sea weed, ashes and decom¬ 
posed corals. Decayed plants and 
animals furnished the emanations or 
gaseous copies around which the soft 

amount of substance crystalized on 

«/ 

the warm beach of the sea, as stone is 
formed in a bladder. They are found 

t/ 

in warm places where plants and ani¬ 
mals were decomposing and forming 
slime and the nucleuses for such fos¬ 
sils. On the enduring stones of a 

u 

warm shore are deposited the ever in¬ 
structive record of an experience of a 
world. On the immortal consolida¬ 
tions within the brain of a higher or¬ 
ganization are deposited the ever in¬ 
structive records of a human life’s ex- 
perience. A world of humanity is 


THE DEVELOPED! ENT OP OUR EARTH. 


45. 


able to examine what a ventricle 
of the earth contains. A world of 
souls is able to examine what a ven¬ 
tricle of a human brain contains. 

Limestone is a trap rock converted 
into a species of chalk. Chalk can be 
made limestone by decomposing it a 
little more. 

The soil on every hill and mountain 
is made by the decomposing influ¬ 
ence of the current of electricity the 
earth is discharging, and it is only 
decomposed corals. Trees upon the 
hill are only great corals more de¬ 
veloped. If covered by rock it is a 
mass of hardened coral rock only 
enough decomposed to become a pul¬ 
verized atoll fringe. The hill was a 
point of the atoll border of hill or 
mountain. The hill is vastly older 
than the great mountain. Everything 
in nature has been a growth by de¬ 
composition change and organi- 


' 46. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

zation of substance. Before the 
mountain there was something to 
make it out of Every upheaval was 
caused by a volcano. Everv hill has 
a cavern as great as its elevation 
above the earth’s surface. The differ¬ 
ence between its cavern and the cra¬ 
ter of Vesuvius is in the extent of 
burning or decomposing the surface 
of the cavern. A hill’s crater is found 
by opening the hill to the depth of its 
base. The depth of a crater is the 
distance to the center of the earth. 
Any body descended into one will be 
burned up or suspended by the cur¬ 
rent of electricitv. 

t/ 

Where the ocean is an organiza¬ 
tion of its gases a ball will be sus¬ 
pended. 

The stars are suspended in their 
elevations where there is no motion 
of a current of electricity except in 
the direction of their moving. 


THE DEVELOPEMENT OF OUR EARTH. 


47. * 


In the great ranges of mountains 
there is a perpetual chimney for the 
escape of the current of ecletricity 
which could not come up through the 
oceans. Lava is created by the same 
force that created the upheaval, by 
reason of sufficient extent of the cur¬ 
rent to sufficiently increase the heat. 

On the island of 8icilv and an island 

«/ 

of the Lipari there are two frequently 
active volcanoes. They actually have 
electric valves so constructed as to 
allow an escape of the current of the 
earth under the Mediterranean, in a 
way to give their craters an alternate 
discharge of this force. The contact 
of the continents of Asia and Africa 
converging at this point caused a 
gorge or channel for deep water. The 
suppression of the earth’s current by 
the deep water caused the volcanoes. 
The motions of the earth causes the 
alternate flow of its current under 



48. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

this channel. The active volcano 
burns up the gases of the atmosphere. 
The electricity of the inactive volcano 
rushing to fill the space causes a 
slight illumination between their cra¬ 
ters. The aurora around the crater 
of the inactive volcano shows an in¬ 
crease of the earth’s current. 

An earthquake is a sudden rush of 
electricity out of the ground. When¬ 
ever the earth is open, as where veg ¬ 
etation is growing, electricity is com¬ 
ing out of the ground. An earthquake 
is caused by a suppression of this 
flow. The chilling of the oceans or 
great seas or lakes, the storms that 
deluge a great area with water, 
and the closing of the pores of the 
earth by cold, will cause an earth¬ 
quake. When the current bursts out 
by an earthquake, or otherwise, every 
conductor of electricity will be charged 
In this, the telegraph operator can 


THE DEVELOPEMENT OF OUR EARTH 


49. 


learn that electricity is more than 
some peculiar motion of so called 
molecules of the wires. 

Each current of the ocean is describ¬ 
ing an ellipse more or less perfect, 
and a circuit of electricity as plain as 
one produced by a common battery 
with its poles connected. These cir¬ 
cuits are the only breakwaters of the 
oceans, nature has made. They pre¬ 
vent a swell of the water, produced 
bv the moon, becoming so strong as 
to damage the shores of continents 
and islands. The cause of an ocean 
current is in the heat of the water at 
the equator and the greater out flow 
of the earth's electric current on the 
borders of the water. The difference 
in the temperature of the water pro¬ 
duces a rolling, as in a vessel where 
only one side is heated. 

Every time the moon passes 
around the earth the water of every 


50. 


LAW. OK PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


ocean and the Mediterranean sea and 
Gulf of Mexico start towards the 
moon. This is said to be on account 
of the moon’s attraction. 

The attraction of the planetary bod ¬ 
ies is the same kind that is operated 
by the common magnet. The mag¬ 
net is a piece of metal or any sub¬ 
stance around which a current of 
electricity courses. If the substance 
is a piece of amber or glass the cur¬ 
rent is created on one side of its sur¬ 
face and will only course over one 
side as it courses over an ocean cur¬ 
rent. If it is a bar of metal the cur¬ 
rent will pass from one end to the 
other and through the atmosphere 
back to the end it started from. If 
the bar is bent the current will pass 
from one end across to the other. In 
passing through the atmosphere it 
decomposes its gases, creating more 
electricity, by which it longer remains 


THE HEVELOPEMENT OF OUR EARTH. 


51. 


a magnet. The current is made by 

rubbing or placing the metal in a 

current already created. The rub- 

«/ 

bing decomposes the gases of the at¬ 
mosphere and the particles of the sur¬ 
face that is rubbed, converting such 
substances into electricity. Only 
substances that will not allow a cur¬ 
rent to freely pass through them can 
be made magnets. If the atmospher¬ 
ic gases are completely excluded be¬ 
tween one magnet and another no 
power can separate them but another 
current of electricity. The exclusion 

ft/ 

of such gases between two magnets, 
or between a magnet and a substance 
that is of a similar nature, is all that 
causes an approach of one body to 
the other, or the union of the mag¬ 
nets. 

The attraction of a magnet for a 
piece of a similar metal is no more a 
wonder than the collapse of a vessel 


52. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

or chamber when the atmospheric 
gases are excluded from its interior. 
The only thing that occurs in these 
operations is the exhaustion of the 
gases between the parts of the objects 
that come together. The cause of 
the exhaustion of the gases between 
the objects attracted and attracting, 
is the current of electricity that is in¬ 
creased on the surfaces of the attract¬ 
ing objects. The force that presses 
the objects together is the 
pressure of the gases behind the ob¬ 
jects attracted. Any body entirely 
surrounded by electricity cannot be 
attracted by a magnet that is wholly 
surrounded by a current of electric¬ 
ity. 

All the facts concerning the attrac¬ 
tion of magnets are observed in the 
attraction of worlds for each other. 
Every body in the sky is attracted 
more or less by the others. The 


THE DEVELOPEMENT OF OUIl EARTH. 


*> 




pressing on the opposite side of the 
attraction causes them to make an 
obeisance. The current of each body 
decreases the atmospheric gases be¬ 
tween the two causing them to ap¬ 
proach by the pressure of such gases 
behind the bodies. 

All substances are either different 
conditions of decomposition of mica 
or different conditions of decomposi¬ 
tion of this substance pressed to diff¬ 
erent extents. 

Weight is the amount of the earth’s 
attraction upon objects. 

In what has been stated in refer¬ 
ence to the philosophy of the attrac¬ 
tion of gravity, all the explanation of 
the cause of tides is found, except in 
the wave created by the passage of 
the moon over the water, a release of 
the pressure of the atmosphere upon 
the water is created. 

Lightning is the concussion of elec- 



54. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

trie currents of the earth and sun 
meeting in a cloud. The vapor ar¬ 
rests the outflow of the earth’s current 
and allows the sun's to meet it in a 
cloud. A portion of the conflict of 
these great currents, that is giving the 
world its electric light and heat, is 
transferred to the cloud. Everything 

ty 

that produces a halt between the 
earth and the point of its atmosphere 
where a constant conflict takes place 
will make a like concussion. 

What is called the sun is the same 
kind of lightning. It is a constant 
lightning. Every object that 
has been struck by lightning 
withheld the current of the earth's 
electricity in its outflow, and, if there 
was anything in the way of the sun’s 
current that approached such object, 
it was rent or burned up. The light¬ 
ning rod will only create a passage 
of the earth's current along its s.ur- 


THE DEVELOPEMENT OF OUR EARTH. 


face and render the top a pole of the 
current. This would, if extensive 
enough, produce a constant concus¬ 
sion of the earth’s and sun’s currents 
at this point. 

The forming of vapor into clouds 
and drops is caused bv the clashing 
of two opposite currents of electricity. 
The concussion is sufficient to destroy 
the intense vibration of the atmos¬ 
phere which is causing heat and the 
expansion of vapor, and the water of 
the atmosphere becomes sufficiently 
solid to be attracted to the earth. 

Snow is formed upon the emana- 
nations or souls of the algae of the 
ocean. But for these shadows, to 
which the vapor is attracted, it would 
fall in drops of hail or water. It is 
easy to see that something must be 
added to change into snowflakes in¬ 
stead of hail in the same temperature. 
Snowflakes are the shape of worms 


56. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

or insects. Compare a chart of snow¬ 
flakes with one of the algae of the 
ocean. 

A melting snow will often be cov¬ 
ered with small insects like the com¬ 
mon fly but longer in proportion to 
the size of the body. A part of the 
soul of an algae is converted into a 
fly. It is the same shape as the 
branch of the snowflake crystal. A 
part of the snowflake is melted and 
its support in the nature of the soul 
of a leaf of a plant is converted into 
a fly. The myriads of migrating 
grasshoppers of the western plains 
are probably of the same origin. 

The emanations from land plants 
are too delicate to form like crystals. 
It is only in a quiet night on window 
panes and smooth surfaces, where a 
small amount of water is congealed, 
they cause crystalizations. 

In every organization that is creat- 


THE DEVEEOPEMENT OF OUR EARTH. 


ed a soul is also created, which is giv¬ 
en the water or atmosphere at its 
death or dissolution. 

When the earth is closed by cold 
its current cannot escape and these 
crystalizations can be formed. 

In all such stamping of our win¬ 
dows there is the soul of a plant por¬ 
trayed. 

A thunderhead is a cloud of vapor 
condensed at one clash of the cur¬ 
rents of electricity. The shape and 
billows of the cloud delineate the ex¬ 
tent and direction of the motion of the 
atmosphere produced by such a con¬ 
cussion. 

From every point of the earth a 
spot on the great construction of light 
called the sun, is seen. They are as 
near like the ocean, or great body of 
water near where the observer is, as 
the map of it in an atlas. The conflict 
of the sun’s current with the earth’s 


58. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


at about the limit of the earth’s at¬ 
mosphere causes the sun light. The 
earth’s electric light! The check the 
waters of the ocean gives the out¬ 
flowing current of the earth, partially 
extinguishes this light. The appear¬ 
ance of the spot will correspond to 
the shape and depth of the water. 
This picture of the ocean, seen through 
a telescope, will show every ocean 
current, every difference in its depth 
and every great sweep of the atmos¬ 
pheric currents. Any object be¬ 
tween this light and the sun will have 
the same effect, as the object on the 
earth or in its atmosphere, has upon 
it 

The transit of venus is a slight ex¬ 
tinguishment of this electric light by 
the interception of the sun’s electric 
current by the planet Venus. 

The descending current of the sun 
upon the ocean at its greatest depth 


THE DEVELOPEMENT OF OUE EARTH. 


59. 


is creating all the sparks and illumi¬ 
nations on the masts of vessels. The 
St. Elmo's fire is an example of the 
creation of an electric light by a cur¬ 
rent of electricity from the sun. 

•/ 

The substance of every object on 
earth discharges a current of electric¬ 
ity when in the atmosphere where a 
current of the sun can strike it. 

Every phenomena of sun spots is 
seen on the moon. 

Without the appearance of the 
earth’s and sun’s clash of currents of 
electricity no explanation of the 
earth’s light and heat can be made 
that in mind strength is beyond a 
child’s follv. 

At the focus of our world’s current 
of electricity with the focus of the 
sun’s current we see the reflection or 
appearance of the sun, and so with 
every planet and moon and star. 

The illuminations are the same in 


60. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


character as the arc light in electric 

Mirages and all such pictures of 
the surface of the earth and the ob¬ 
jects on it are a species of photo¬ 
graphinglike photographing our faces 
on a current of the plate in a camera. 
A current discharged from the earth, 
will imprint upon a stratum of atmos¬ 
phere the forms of objects from which 
it is discharged, and, as in photograph¬ 
ing, the features of objects are pro¬ 
duced by an inequality of the current 
which is made by the difference in 

j> 

the rapidity of its discharge. 

A wind is a whirl of a current of 
electricity pulling atmospheric gases 
after it. It is a portion of the current 
coming upon the earth and then as¬ 
cending again. The whirl is a loop 
upon a great current that is coursing 
around the globe. The difference in 
the breadth of the loop makes the dif- 



THE DEVELOPED! ENT OF OUR EARTH. 


61. 


ference in the duration or extent of 
the wind. 

In contemplating electricity in any 
of the works of nature, only a very 
subtle influence capable of passing 
through any other substance to some 
extent, and capable of decomposing 
any substance, is discovered. It is 
calculated to give substances the 
character of organizations, and does 
when the substance is capable of be- 
ins: organized. It has always accom- 

O cj J 

plished the development of any ob¬ 
ject or organization in nature. It is 
capable of destroying all objects and 
organizations, and it is the only thing 

“ / J O 

that does. 

A fog is a small cloud of vapor 
made by a cold wind from the ocean 
or cold place. It will continue but a 
short time and disappears by a warm 
atmosphere expanding it. 

A cloud cannot continue without a 
surface on which to accumulate. 


(32. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


III. 

c 

ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 


Flower in the crannied wall, 

I pluck you out of the crannies; 

Hold you here, root and all in my hand. 
Little flower—but if I could understand 

What you are, root and all, and all in all, 

I should know what God and man is 

—[Tennyson. 

Plants grow upwards and increase 
in size. From this fact we naturally 
look for some power or influence op¬ 
erating in the same direction to pro¬ 
duce such growth and organizations. 
A claim is made that the growth is 
by its foliage absorbing moisture, 
gases and carbon from the atmos- 



ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 


63. 


phere. No satisfactory explanation 
seems to he given of the operation, 
organization, beginning or end of 
these substances. No explanation or 
reason is given for a stump’s growth 
for years after its foliage is entirely 
severed. 


This force of all nature is the oper¬ 
ator and organizer of all growth. An¬ 
imals grow from what they eat, which 
is used to increase or repair their 
bodies. The process of their growth 
is a repetition of the growth of plants, 
except plants get their substance from 
the soil. 

The coral is the parent plant of 
all the plants of earth. In its de¬ 
velopment and growth the same 
operation takes place that is seen 
in the growth of plants. The poly¬ 
pus of the coral is as much a bud 
as the bud of any plant, but less 
developed. It is being called an in- 


(A. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


sect by reason of the continued ac- 
ceptance of the error without exami¬ 
nation. It has no breath, except the 
electricity that develops it, no organs, 
blood, or power of motion. No rea¬ 
son is given for its different colors. 
The coral of different zones are as 
widely different as the species of trees 
in the forest. In each portion of the 
coral productions there are as many 
kinds of growth. The difference in 
the development of these coral orga¬ 
nizations has led to all the difference 
in the species of the vegetable king¬ 
dom, except the difference caused by 
temperature and soil. 

In the construction of a coral or 

coral island, there was a consolidation 

of a current of electricity that came 

up through the crust of the earth. 

As much electricity was created as 

•/ 

was used in making the coral. From 
the inside to the outside of this crust 


ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 


63. 


pliere. No satisfactory explanation 
seems to be given of the operation, 


organization, beginning or end of 
these substances. No explanation or 
reason is given for a stump’s growth 
for years after its foliage is entirely 

«- o J 


severed. 


This force of all nature is the oper¬ 
ator and organizer of all growth. An¬ 
imals grow from what they eat, which 
is used to increase or repair their 
bodies. The process of their growth 
is a repetition of the growth of plants, 
except plants get their substance from 
the soil. 

The coral is the parent plant of 
all the plants of earth. In its de¬ 
velopment and growth the same 
operation takes place that is seen 
in the growth of plants. The poly¬ 
pus of the coral is as much a bud 
as the bud of any plant, but less 
developed. It is being called an in- 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OH ORE VTION. 


64 . 

sect by reason of the continued ac- 
•/ 

ceptance of the error without exami¬ 
nation. It has no breath, except the 
electricity that develops it, no organs, 
blood, or power of motion. Xo rea¬ 
son is given for its different colors. 
The coral of different zones are as 
widely different as the species of trees 
in the forest. In each portion of the 
coral productions there are as many 
kinds of growth. The difference in 
the development of these coral orga¬ 
nizations has led to all the difference 
in the species of the vegetable king¬ 
dom, except the difference caused by 
temperature and soil. 

In the construction of a coral or 
coral island, there was a consolidation 
of a current of electricity that came 
up through the crust of the earth. 

As much electricity was created as 

•/ 

was used in making the coral. From 
the inside to the outside of this crust 


ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 


63. 


phere. No satisfactory explanation 
seems to be given of the operation, 
organization, beginning or end of 
these substances. No explanation or 
reason is given for a stump's growth 
for years after its folia ye is entirely 

1 / ~ %j 

severed. 


This force of all nature is the oper¬ 
ator and organizer of all growth. An¬ 
imals grow from what they eat, which 
is used to increase or repair their 
bodies. The process of their growth 
is a repetition of the growth of plants, 
except plants get their substance from 
the soil. 


The coral is the parent plant of 
all the plants of earth. In its de¬ 
velopment and growth the same 
operation takes place that is seen 
in the growth of plants. The poly¬ 
pus of the coral is as much a bud 
as the bud of any plant, but less 
developed. It is being called an in- 


64. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


sect by reason of the continued ac- 

t/ 

ceptance of the error without exami¬ 
nation. It has no breath, except the 
electricity that develops it, no organs, 
blood, or power of motion. No rea¬ 
son is given for its different colors. 
The coral of different zones are as 
widely different as the species of trees 
in the forest. In each portion of the 
coral productions there are as many 
kinds of growth. The difference in 
the development of these coral orga¬ 
nizations has led to all the difference 
in the species of the vegetable king¬ 
dom, except the difference caused bv 
temperature and soil. 

In the construction of a coral or 
coral island, there was a consolidation 
of a current of electricity that came 
up through the crust of the earth. 
As much electricity was created as 
was used in making the coral. From 
the inside to the outside of this crust 



ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 


65. 


of mica of the earth, a current passes. 
It decomposes the crust every mo¬ 
ment. 

An examination of a coral, any 
plant not full of sap, and an engrav¬ 
ing of our lungs, kidneys and chan¬ 
nels of circulation, will show thev are 

/ •/ 

produced by the same philosophy of 
growth. Each of these have the same 
kind of tissues, cells, and channels of 
circulation. The power called elec- 
tricitv is the constructor. 

From the surface and extremities 
of all plants a constant flow of elec¬ 
tricity is taking place. In some 
plants its escape is so rapid as to pro¬ 
duce shocks to the arm and body of 
a person touching the plant. In oth¬ 
ers, some flowers for instance, the es¬ 
cape of this influence will produce a 
light visible in the dark. In the de¬ 
composition of plants, a similar light 
is produced, often called the ignis 


66. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

fatuus. Every plant is only decom¬ 
posed when this influence is released 
from every part of its substance. Its 
decomposition is by reason of the es¬ 
cape of electricity from the plant. 

The laborious Faraday discovered 
that every substance contained just 
enough electricity to decompose it, 
and that the decomposition ceased 
when this influence could escape no 
longer. 

All productions of growth in a plant 
are by exudations from the channels 
of its circulation. No part of a plant 
is constructed by any increase of sub¬ 
stance on its sides or extremities 
from external substances. It is nev¬ 
er the case that any production of the 
plant is an application of matter to it 
from the atmosphere or from any 
other source than through its chan¬ 
nels of circulation. 

In each seed of a plant there is on- 


ORIGIN OP PLANTS. 


67. 


ly a compact bundle of leaves or a 
mass of consolidated protoplasm—wa¬ 
ter mixed with earth and gas. The 
difference in the condition of the sub¬ 
stance is due to the method of con¬ 
struction of seed. A kernel of corn 
is but a composition of the same kind 
of matter as the stalk. It is a little 
more solid and less organized. The 
seed of an apple is a bundle of leaves, 
or protoplasm, thrown into the core 
of the apple by the pulsating force 
that constructs the apple tree. 

When a seed is so far decomposed 
as to furnish a stream of its sub¬ 
stance, this substance will be borne 
upwards, as the decomposed fuel in a 
fire, and in a shapeless form. It is a 
slow process of combustion, in which 
the decomposed substance is convert¬ 
ed into a blaze of such dimensions as 
to be capable of being pushed to¬ 
wards the skv, as the flame of decom- 


6«. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


posing wood is pushed. 

When a stream of this substance is 
being forced in the direction of the 
atmosphere, a concentration of the 
earth’s current is created in connec¬ 
tion with it; and as the substance 
continues to develop, this additional 
draft of such current will draw from 
the earth a condition of fluid proto¬ 
plasm, which is water intermixed with 
the particles of decomposed earth and 
gases of the atmosphere. 

Now, when these streams of a seed 
are thus advancing, this protoplasm 
thus attracted out of the soil will be 
connected with them, the stream of 
protoplasm will unite with the decom¬ 
posing seed, as a body of water will 
rush into a vacuum or empty space, 
for the absence of the substance that 
once existed in the seed will create a 
similar vacuum. 

In every germinating seed this va- 


ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 


69. 


cuum can be discovered, and it will 
increase until the shell of the seed be¬ 
comes hollow. When it is entirely 
hollow a union of the streams of pro¬ 
toplasm and streams of decomposed 
seed will take place. Any influence 
that prevents this union will prevent 
any further germination of the plant. 
This is often observed when a change 
of temperature to a considerable ex¬ 
tent is made in the atmosphere. A 
sudden change in the decomposition 
of a seed will produce a cessation of 
the flow of the stream of protoplasm 
towards it, and it will sink into the 
earth again, except such part of it as 
has solidified, and the result will be a 
decomposition of - the seed without 
producing any organization. 

In all the important operations of 
growth there is onesimple force ex¬ 
erted. It is this current of electricity 
the earth discharges. The plant is 


70. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


organized matter. Its force of con¬ 
struction and motion is electricity. 
The animal is only organized sub¬ 
stance with a greater opportunity for 
the manifestations of electricity. No 

J 

order of organizations is anything 
more. Two things are always em¬ 
ployed by each, matter and magnetic 
currents. 

The circuits and currents of elec¬ 
tricity I am describing are those of 
nature. When a current is created 
by the device of a person the power 
can be employed only in the affairs 
of a person or community. In nature 

it is a constant coursing acting 
power. 

A current can be communicated to 
another current, but in such a case the 
electricity or power is only what can 
be created by the decomposition of 
some substance as in the galvanic 
battery or other contrivance of a per¬ 
son. 


ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 


71. 


If the stream of protoplasm—which 
is defined to be water mixed with 
particles of decomposed earth and 
gases—is unchecked, the plant is born, 
and it comes into the world with a 
covering similar to the hair of the 
animal or child. 

In the creation of its hair there is 
only a smaller exudation of proto¬ 
plasm out of the pores of the germ. 
This bundle of leaves pushed out of 
the earth is shaken open by the vibra¬ 
tions in the atmosphere and in as 
many directions as it has leaves. 

t/ 

They are the waves of decomposed 
seed made by the throbs, breathings 
or pulsations of the currents of elec¬ 
tricity of the earth; called the nuta¬ 
tions of the earth. 

Really, they are the obeisances of 

one planet to another when passing, 
or what is called attraction of gravi¬ 
tation. It is phenomena of electric¬ 
ity. 


72. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OP CREATION. 


The earth is nodding: its axis every 

O %J 

coursing of the moon, and every rev¬ 
olution on its axis. This motion gives 
the current of electricity passing out 
of the earth a pulsating motion. 

The earth’s noddings make a large 
and small leaf alternately in all these 
creations of leaves. 

Bv the word “plant" I mean all 
trees and plants. It is very difficult 
in a few words to explain facts ex¬ 
tending through all time and all na¬ 
ture. 

This same current of electricity 

t 

coursing out of earth passes these 
undecomposed particles of soil into 
the channels of circulation of the 
plant. They are forced to the surface 
and are what we are calling bark. 
The bone of the animal is made in 
the same way from the marrow. 

A current of electricity makes chan- 
nels of circulation and escape for it- 


ORIGIN OP PLANTS. 


73. 


self—partly by the force of the cur¬ 
rent, partly by the decomposition of 
substance in its way. The undecom- 
posed substance is thrown out on the 
surface and its consolidation is bark. 
It is the same as wood, but it is what 
was previously created. 

A constantly coursing current of 
electricity is able to decompose any 
kind of a substance. In fact, it is the 
power that produces all growth and 
all life. Without it no growth of 
plants or animals can be had. Its 
absence is death to the plant or ani¬ 
mal. 

The current of electricity that cir- 
dilates upward and through the plant, 
and what is generated in its sweep, is 
all the substance in a plant that con¬ 
structs it, except that the bark is the 
undecomposed atoms thrown out of 
its channels of circulation—such undi¬ 
gested atoms as the plant receives 


74. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


from the earth. 

Every tissue of a tree is only a cre¬ 
ation of the condensation of this in¬ 
fluence, as all tissues are whether in 
plants or animals. Every object in a 
plant except the bark, is the result of 
the condensation of what drives the 
substance of the circulation into its 
channels. 

In the explanation of the cell con¬ 
struction of a plant a clearer under¬ 
standing of the growth of a plant will 
be had. 

It is well known that every plant 
and animal is made up of cells, and 
that in the animals blood is what is 
called corpuscles, but it does not seem 
to be usually stated that these corpus¬ 
cles are but the cells of the plant sent 
into the blood of the animal, after be¬ 
ing swallowed in plant food. 

A cell, of course, can only be seen 
by the assistance of a microscope. 


ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 


75. 


They are formed as the bubble upon 

water is formed. A mere puff of 

electricity punctures it and at the 

same time another is formed, and so 

on constantly, one capping the other 

until the tissue is formed. They are 

•/ 

condensed electricity. 

Every cell is the same as the first 
except in size. A root is the con¬ 
struction of cells in the direction of 
the soil. A root is a germination 
downward. Placing seed in the soil 
is petitioning the Almighty for a par¬ 
ticular order of plants. It is gener¬ 
ally answered. 

Every plant absorbs from the 
ground only water and a very small 
amount of such atoms as are found 
in our atmosphere. In its channels 
of circulation all these atoms are de¬ 
composed and their substance re¬ 
turned to a condition of electricitv, 
except what is discharged on its sur- 


70. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

face as bark. 

A branch is produced by the burst¬ 
ing of the tissues of the stalk or twig, 
caused bv the accumulated current 
and number of cells. The branch in¬ 
creases in size in the same way in 
which the body is increased. 

In the blossom are the pistil, sta¬ 
men, anther pollen,corolla and calyx. 
The pistil is a nearly straight column 
in the center of the flower dilated at 
its summit into a globular expan¬ 
sion. The stamens are slender 
threads around it bearing the anthers 
upon their extremities. The pollen 
is fine dust discharged from the an¬ 
thers at maturity. The delicate and 
brilliant colored leaves surrounding 
the whole are the corolla and the out¬ 
side green leaves the calyx. 

A germ is commenced by the con¬ 
struction of a cell. Cells of plants 
are the same except in size and den- 


OHIO IN OF PLANTS. 


77. 


sity, which are produced by the con¬ 
dition of soil, and affect the density 
of wood, and the taste and duration 
of fruit. 

A blossom is a bundle of leaves 

% 

shaken open by the vibration of the 
atmosphere. The end of a twig is 
porous and tender. The pulsations 
form these bundles of leaves by shak¬ 
ing the protoplasm into waves as it is 
halted at the end of the twig. The 
color of the leaves is the result of the 
different degrees of decomposition. 
The green will decompose last and 
the brightest red first. 

A stamen of a blossom is composed 
of the cells of the twigs and plant 
stock, released by the current of elec¬ 
tricity coursing through the channels 
of circulation and forced out of the 
openings at the end of the twig. The 
cells thus discharged are converted 
into a sort of a tube, and through the 


78. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

channel of the tube the cells are 
pressed, and when the force can no 
longer construct a tube these cells 
are spilled over the top of the stamen 
in bundles, and as soon as a bundle 
is poured over the top a decomposi¬ 
tion of its surface takes place. This 
constructs a shell for holding the mass 
together. 

The pollen and its stamen is the 
brain of the plant, and has the capac¬ 
ity of affording intelligence to the 
blossom by informing it of danger 
from cold or rain and to close its 
leaves. 

A withdrawal of the current of elec- 
tricitv from the blossom into the stalk 

is 

causes the bloom to close. 

This is the first brain made in the 
course of nature. 

A pressing of cells or corpuscles of 
the blood through a pore of an artery 
at a sharp turn, is the whole construe- 


ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 


79. 


tion of a stamen and pollen in a hu¬ 
man or animal brain. 

When a blossom decomposes, the 
pores of a leaf in the blossom are 
closed. When the atoms of substance 
in a channel of circulation in a plant 
are decomposed, the electricity gener¬ 
ated by their decomposition will be 
forced through and out the end of the 
tissues. When it is out it will so 
consolidate as to form a cornea over 
the end of the tissue or hair. A 
quasi solid is the result. It can be 
seen coming into existence at the end 
of the tissue. Every one of its oper¬ 
ations can be detected except its exit 
from the extremity of the tissue or 
hair. That is too refined for observa¬ 
tion. The most of the decomposed 
leaves of the blossom look like charred 
paper. The carbon created makes a 
part of the appearance. This con¬ 
traction and decomposition prevents 


80. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OKOREATTON. 


a flow of the current of electricity 

•/ 

through these blossom leaves longer, 
and an exudation around the twig at 
the base of the blossom will take 
place. A fruit is a bundle of waste 
cells and water crowded out by the 
electricity at this point of the twig. 
The taste is determined by the rapidi¬ 
ty of decomposition of the cells in the 
water. It is an escape of the sub¬ 
stance in the twig, around the twig at 
this point, that creates a cherry, ap¬ 
ple, or any species of fruit. The 
same process creates fruit at the 
base of a plant that has only 
leaves, such as turnips, beets, and car¬ 
rots, and creates the cabbage partly 
in the ground and partly out of it- 
The seeds are protoplasm thrown out 
of the stem within the fruit. They 
are consolidated by the force of pres¬ 
sure, and only one at a time is pro¬ 
duced. The seed of the apple or 


ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 


81. 


pear is a bundle of waves like a bud, 

and would blossom if they were ex- 

§/ 

posed to the atmosphere. They have 
the same shape as a bud, and are 
dark when the fruit is ripe, because 
they are more decomposed and con¬ 
solidated. The crust preserves them 
till they decompose and germinate in 
the earth. The decomposing blossom 
or pollen cannot give a seed the means 
of germinating, as it is claimed. The 
cherry seed is so decomposed it is 
as hard as a stone. Pollen could not 
affect it. No part of it is produced 
until the pollen of the blossom is 
entirely decayed. The seed is crusted 
by a decomposed part of itself. The 
cherry decomposes it. The acid is 
created in rapidity of growth. It 
is sharper or sourer because de¬ 
composing faster, which is all that 
causes the difference in taste of fruit. 

The top of a turnip, beet, parsnip 


82. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


or carrot is like a great, coarse blos¬ 
som. Their leaves decompose to 
some extent. This checks the flow 
of protoplasm. Being less solid than 
a tree, it increases in size at the base 
of the would be blossom. The cab¬ 
bage is still more porous and not 
much less than a great, coarse blos¬ 
som. If the dirt is removed except 
from the root it will unfold considera¬ 
bly like the turnip. An orange is 
different from an apple by reason of 
the difference of atmosphere. A pine 
apple differs from a turnip for the 
same reason. A banana is a corn 
stalk with bunches of cobs. 

In the growth of corn, the leaves 
branch out only in two directions. 
The shape of the kernel prevents the 
first wave or stalk from being thrown 
out except on two sides. If it was 
round, the leaves would come out in 
whorls. The tassel is the first ap- 


ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 


83. 


pearance after leaves, and when it 
has commenced to decompose the 
col) and silken accompaniments ap¬ 
pear. The cause of their appearance 
is the suppression of growth in the 
direction of the tassel. The cob is a 
bursting out of substance on the side 
where the leaves unfold. The same 
process of growth as fruit. The cob 
is over the leaf because the stalk is 
more easily ruptured at that point. 
When the cob commences to solidify, 
the substance of growth is squeezed 
out through its pores, as our hair or 
perspiration is squeezed out. It is 
then allowed to solidify. 

When the kernel is all dry it con¬ 
tracts still more and is in a condition 
to be exploded by heat. Popping is 
the explosion of the whole cells in the 
interior of the corn. These whole 
cells are as explosive as the whole 
cells of glycerine. The explosion is 


84. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

the conversion of a delicate whole 
cell as thin as a bubble on water into 
electricity. 

t/ 

The construction of the kernel in 
rows is caused by the threads. They 
are hairs grown out of the cob as any 
hair is grown, produced at regular 
intervals, and before the kernel. 
When they are fully grown they de¬ 
compose at the end of the ear and 
contract. 

The growth of oats, barley, wheat, 
rye and similar plants is a conversion 
of the tassel into a bundle of seeds. 

Nut growing plants are developed 
like the cherry except the fruit is 
mixed with the substance that creates 
bark, and neither leaves or perfect 
fruit is produced. The bark is loos¬ 
ened around a twig and the substance 
thrown out around the twig and de¬ 
composed under such a separated 
part of the bark. The plant or 


ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 


85. 


tree is too undeveloped to blossom. 
A walnut or butternut indicates a 
stunted growth. Their leaves are 
constructed partly like the cherry. 

A clover is only a little more develop¬ 
ed than a crinoid, its grand parent. In 
its natural growth it appears in new 
soil where a pine has grown. When 
grown in such soil a few seasons a 
species of herds grass appears, a plant 
one more step advanced. The herds 
grass is followed by the buttercup, 
and that bv white daisv. When this 
is gone a sorrel appears. This is fol¬ 
lowed bv moss. The moss is followed 

•y 

by a vine, and that bv a toadstool. 
A mushroom is a toadstool from soil, 
the other from decomposing wood. 
All that* prevented the clover from be 
ing a pine tree was a sufficiet cur¬ 
rent of electricitv. 

The origin of different grains and 
vegetables is found in the thistle, a 


86. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


little further developed crinoid. The 
tops of the wheat, oats, corn and bar¬ 
ley are extended thistle tops. 

The small plants are degraded pro¬ 
ductions from some of the developed 
crinoids. 

The little violet is the lingering 
work of a sunflower, and the origin 
of the cucumber, pumpkin and squash. 

The dandelion is also a creation 
from a degenerated sunflower. A 
watermelon is a greater developed 
pumpkin. It would be as sour as 
acid but for the great amount of wa- 

(j 

ter in it. 

All plants are related. Their affec¬ 
tion is of the same character as that 
between animals and human beings. 

The pumpkin sends to the kquash a 
current of the agent of love and re¬ 
ceives one in return. In a short time 
they attempt to exchange experiments. 
In the magnetic influence of one 


\ 


ORIGIN OF PLANTS. 


87. 


plant upon another is found the phil¬ 
osophy of amalgamation of plants and 
the reproduction of plant species. 

The reason the parent plant can in¬ 
duce the germ to grow like itself is 
the same that allows a picture of' a 
person to be stamped on the chemi¬ 
cals in a camera. 



- — 4 


88. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


IV. 

ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


You are asked to candidly compare 
the doctrine of Natural Selection or 
The Survival of the Fittest, with the 
ideas here expressed upon the Origin 
of Animals. 

An explanation of what is stated in 
Genesis is contained in these pages. 

The abilitv to understand the Di- 

%J 

vine plan of creation will he in pro¬ 
portion to the power to concentrate 
the mind upon the common affairs of 




ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


89. 


nature, and to follow the unfoldment 

and organization of matter by the 

force of electricity. 

%) 

A piece of mica or shale, a piece 
of the flesh of an animal, the cornea 
of the eye, and the pores of a petrified 
log, are a partial solidification of this 
force. 

The scientific and medical fraterni¬ 
ty are confident the germ of life is 
in the atmosphere. It is, and in the 
the water also 

Each atom of aas constituting the 
atmosphere is the continuation of the 
condensation of the electricity of the 
solar system. 

Oxygen is a mass of very fine cells 
or balls of perfectly transparent elec¬ 
tricity. 

A constant grinding of the gases 
of the atmosphere will convert them 
into the original condition of electric¬ 
ity. 


90. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


This is done by the electric dyna¬ 
mo. 

Hydrogen is oxygen burned by the 
earth’s current of electricity into 
smoke. 

When a cell of a plant or animal is 
constructed the current of electricity 
fills the cell, whirls within it, and 
makes a crust or lining in which this 
current never ceases motion. This 
lining: is not destroyed in the decom- 

Cj «/ 

position of the plant or animal. It is 
an indestructible, nearly colorless, 
tasteless, odorless substance. 

These cell linings adhere together 
by attraction and make a shadow em- 
anation or soul, the size and form of 
the plant or animal. 

They constitute all there is of ni¬ 
trogen gas. 

The construction of this cell lining 
can and has been observed by a pow¬ 
erful microscope. 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


91 


When the gas or plant copy or soul 
was in the water or atmosphere filled 
with vapor the gathering of the hy¬ 
drogen gas to it by the attraction of 
its current of electricity created a 
body. In all spontaneous generation 
today it is the means of making; a 
body more dense than gas. 

The size of the creatures depend up¬ 
on the amount of hydrogen gas that 
can be attracted. 

They are insects in the temperate 
latitudes. 

In the tropics the development of 
their bodies sometimes gives the ap- 
perance of reptiles and birds. 

All creatures of a spontaneous cre¬ 
ation are constructions of hydrogen 
gas. 

The originals of all species of ani¬ 
mals were constructed of hydrogen gas. 

The growth of a creature by an ac¬ 
cumulation of cells did not occur till 


92. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF GREATTON. 


after a communion of sexes, in the 

office of reproduction, was the com¬ 
mencement of the creation of a crea¬ 
ture. 

A cell lining given the water or at¬ 
mosphere, when the plant decays, is 
the substance, from which all animals 
attained their origin, and now obtain 
their origin. Human beings are con¬ 
structed from the animal soids; ani¬ 
mals and crystals from plant souls. 

When the plant or piece of animal 
matter is decomposed in warm water 
or in damp and warm atmosphere, 
the phantom emanation from it will 
be possessed of the power of attrac¬ 
tion, and so will each part of it. 

In the early days of vegetable 
growth, the air and waters were filled 
with gases and decomposing organi¬ 
zations of rapidly developed vegeta¬ 
tion. The immense amount of the 
filth, thus generated, was the substance, 


I 


\ 


% 

ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 93. 

from which the whole order of animals 
in the air, in the water and on the 
earth became possessed of their origi¬ 
nal organizations. The different spe¬ 
cies of animals are the representatives 
and further development of the souls 
of the different orders of plants. 

Fish are the better development of 
ferns and other plants, that fell into 
the water, decomposed and developed 
at the bottom. Animals that origi¬ 
nated on land were the greater devel¬ 
opments of plants that decomposed 
on land. 

In each of the forms of these spe¬ 
cies of animals, a copy of some vege¬ 
table organization is seen. 

Wherever an animal is found in 
water, air, or on land, a plant that af¬ 
forded it being can be found. 

The use of this filth and gases, in 
filling the roll of animal creations, for 
all time, except the spontaneous gen- 


94. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


eration of insects and worms, purified 
the air and water. 

The same influences, that give the 
insect spontaneous life now, gave be¬ 
ing; to the vast and original animal 
creations of the deep, the land and 
the air. 

The absence of a great amount of 
slime and gases, to clothe these ema¬ 
nations, made the difference in size. 
Purifying the air and water is the 
means for clearing out the obnoxious 
beasts and reptiles. When the forest 
is cleared and the swamp drained, they 
disappear. 

That all cells of plants and animals 
contain a germ capable of another 
condition of life was practically shown, 
by some eminent gentlemen, in at¬ 
tempting to prove that no spontane¬ 
ous life was possible, and that the 
germ of life was in the atmosphere, 
either as animals or as eggs. They 


95. 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


enclosed animal and vegetable sub¬ 
stance, in a bottle, and heated it suffic¬ 
iently, to decompose any ordinary 
substance. It was believed, if the 
the substance, after heating and cool¬ 
ing, did not contain animal life, they 
could claim the germ of life was in 
the atmosphere, or if in the substance, 
heat would destroy them. The result 
was, that life appeared in the sub¬ 
stance. They then excluded the air, 
by applying the air pump, when no 
life appeared. In pumping out the 
atmosphere, they excluded the agent 
of life; the electricity in the atmos¬ 


phere. 

In each cell, what appears to be 
arms or legs or feelers, is seen. They 
are parts of the cel! extended to some 
body in the air or water, that attracts 
them. They are instantly withdrawn 
when the body that attracts them is 


gone. 


96. LAW, OK PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


The aggregation of substance 
around a plant cell or its soul to cre¬ 
ate an insect or in the womb of an 
animal mother and around an animal 
soul in the womb of a human mother, 
are operations of attraction like that 
of the magnet or of the planetary bod¬ 
ies in adhering to the planes of their 
orbits or the waters of the oceans in 
clinging to the globe. 

Such affairs were planned by the 
will of the Almighty, the' Author of 
our being. 

When the warm, moist air and warm 
water no longer contained sufficient 
substances to be attracted to the plant 
souls in the production of animals, the 
organs of the female were created, and 
the womb of an animal furnished the 
better encasement for generating life. 
The attraction of a soul of a plant to 
the womb of an animal is the same as 
the attraction of a piece of metal to 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


97. 


the magnet. Every object having a 
current of electricity on its surface, 
generated after it is constructed, will 
attract objects of a companionable 
substance. The strong current of 
electricity of an excited womb choos- 

fty 

es and attracts from the atmosphere 
a gas emanation or soul of a plant to 
itself, encloses it and at once changes 
its form to the form of the animal con¬ 
taining it. The change of form is by 
the animal’s desire and affection for 
young. The animal will absorb only 
an emanation from a plant because 
the plant, being the origin of the ani¬ 
mal, is attracted to the mother, and 
other creations of such a character 
are repelled. 

A destruction of any species of an¬ 
imal, could be bv destroying the plants 
which gave its origin. The destruc¬ 
tion of a class of animals of sufficient 
size for a gas emanation or soul for 




98. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OP CREATION. 

the origin of a human being, would 
be a destruction of the class of human 
beings of that origin. 

The steps in the plan of creation to 
the making of man, are: first, from 
the mass of constantly moving, con¬ 
densing electricity to the earth’s crust 
or globe of mica and the mass of ex¬ 
ceedingly fine, perfectly transparent 
globes or balls of condensed electricity 
in the atmosphere; second, from the 
earth’s crust to the coral and coral 
atoll with its fringe; third, from the 
coral to the hills, mountains and soil 
or dust of the earth ; fourth, from the 
soil to cells of plants and plants; fifth, 
from plants to cell linings or plant 
souls; sixth, from plant souls to ani¬ 
mals; seventh, from animal souls to 
man. 

When an animal embryo is conver¬ 
ted into an animal its origin is extin¬ 
guished and a greater development 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


99. 


accomplished; when a human embryo 
is completed the origin of a human 
creation is extinct; at the dissolution 
of this embryo a human soul is evol¬ 
ved, different from the one of which it 
is the result, only in form and intelli¬ 
gence. 

Every animal has a resemblance to 
some species of plant in form, ap¬ 
pearance, color, characteristic and man¬ 
ner of accomplishing the offices of 
life. 

There are less than a million differ¬ 
ent animals on earth. Less than one 
hundred thousand, that are exactly 
different in all respects. All animals 
created on earth have a representa¬ 
tive. If you will count the animals 
of this continent, not including those 
exactly like some of other continents 
of the same species and not natives, 
you will find the number less than one 
hundred and probably less than fifty. 





100. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

In every animal there is the elec¬ 
tricity and the substance on which it 
is operating. Electricity is perform¬ 
ing the work of Divine calculation. 
Whenever it is constructing or mov¬ 
ing; an organization of the animal 

O c5 

kingdom, it is actually supported by 
the Author of the universe, as it is 
controlled bv the will of any animal 
or person in the limited scope of the 
being's ability to operate it. Every 
person who can influence another by 
the will, or cause an organ of the body 
to move, is making the same kind of 
use of what is termed electricity, as is 
being made by the Creator. 

The resemblance of a few insects 
and animals to plants, will be but a 
key, to the further investigations of 
the subject. 

The spider resembles the roots of 
the dandelion. This plant has a great 
greed for water. The spider’s greed 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


101. 


is shown by its great stomach. 

The web of the dandelion encloses 
its seeds, and when capable of gener¬ 
ating, the web is broken, and the seeds 
fall to the earth. The young spiders, 
in the web surrounding them, when 
of sufficient weight break the web and 
fall to the earth. The spread of its 
legs resembles the leaves of the dan¬ 
delion. The hair on its legs are of 
the shape of the leaves; its claws like 
the prints of the leaf. Its eyes and 
feelers are more useful than the pistils 
and nearly the same shape. Its body 
is a consolidation of the gases of the 
decomposed dandelion, different in 
size by reason of such consolidation. 

t/ 

An angleworm is a better develop¬ 
ment of a spear of herds grass. A 
spear of herds grass is constructed in 
joints one at a time, crowded out in 
the center of the previous one. It is 
a heap of protoplasm filling the chan- 


102. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


nel of its circulation. The channel 
will diminish in size in proportion to 
the escape of the electricity through 
the sides of its joints. The puff of 
electricity at the surface of the stalk 
is a creation of a cell. The influence 
is as sure to condense at the surface 
and form a cell or tissue, as a puff of' 
steam is to condense at the nose of a 
tea kettle. The same process takes 
place in the development of the worm. 
Instead of the electricity of the inter¬ 
ior of the plant it has an amount of 
earth, from which it is created, to push 
on its growth. The original joint of 
the worm is the joint of the grass. 

The dirt is carried in by the water 

#/ 

running through it. A glass tube 
filled with earth in a warm atmos¬ 
phere will produce a growth of weeds 
at the north end. This is the process 
of all worm growth. In some, the 

joint is severed and growth contin¬ 
ued. 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


103, 


In each plant there is a beginning 
of what is called the animal kingdom. 
There is no point in the line of both 
kingdoms, where one ends and the 
other commences. 

The beetle is a turnip with life and 
motion. Its anthers are converted 
leaves pointing in the same way. Its 

eye is an anther stopped in growth. 
Its feelers partly developed anthers. 
The body is the shape of the turnip 
with the stomach topped with the 
converted root. The body is an ac¬ 
cumulation of the base of the leaves. 

In the same line of development 
the cricket has ways like the beet. 

t/ 

Its decomposition or black color is 
like the drooped and decaying beet leaf 
after a rain. The beet seeks a damp 
place to grow, the cricket to develop 
and chirp. 

The devil’s darning needle spreads 
its wings like the thistle and carries a 


104. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

stalk below its wings like the plant. 
A pricker is at its head and root, and 
more around its body. Flies scatter, 
as it speeds through the air, as they 
do from the thistle in the wind. In 
its limbs a copy of this plant can be 
seen. Its whole apperance is like the 
thistle. 

A native grasshopper is a devel¬ 
oped carrot, with a body the same 
shape and nearly the same color. If 
it had only its long stomach and 
head, with the feelers pointing for¬ 
ward, its appearance would suggest 
the origin 

In all insects, the leaves and their 
base, are used in the legs, wings and 
projections from the head. 

The origin of the jaws of all ani¬ 
mals are the roots of plants. All 
birds and insects have pincers for 
feeders, from the pistils of a blossom 
of some character. All horns of ani- 


ORIGIN OF ANTMAIX. 


105. 


mals are from the branching roots of 
plants. Fish have them in proportion 
to the decay of plants in the water. 
Look at the roots of the pine tree on 
the reindeer! The horns of the buffa¬ 
lo descend in front of the head and 
rise again like the roots of the maple 
and oak. 

A caterpillar is a better construc¬ 
tion of a joint of a cucumber vine, 
with like hair on. It finds its food in 
the same substance, that attracted the 
vine. 

The butterfly is an extension of the 
blossom on legs, in the air, with its 
ability to cling for rest to some object 
above a destroyer. 

The accompaniment of the flowers 
of the garden, window sill and cham¬ 
ber are sure to come into the cham¬ 
ber as flies, butterflies or millers. 
The destruction of clothes by their de¬ 
posit of eggs, is a continuation of the 


10G LAW. OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

devouring influence of a warm room. 

The shape, stripes and characteris¬ 
tics of the potato bug are like the cu¬ 
cumber. Its head is turned down like 
the end of a cucumber. It will follow 
the same vine the cucumber follows 
and consume it, with its great greedy 
stomach. 

The roach is generally generated in 
the warm kitchen or sink, with plenty 
of cracks to mould bread crumbs in, 
as long as the roach. A dose of acid 
will cause the wheat in its body to 
ferment. Acid or alkali will rid the 
place of them. On the ends of their 
legs are the wheat burs or blossoms, 
which serve them for feet, as clumsy 
as a crumb. 

The bug generated in decomposing 
cheese is as much like a hog, as any 
thing so small well can be. It is gen¬ 
erated in all respects the same way. 
They are produced from animal cells 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


107. 


or tissues, which are only different 
from the plant cells and tissues, in the 
degrees of consolidation. They get 
their organization from the magnetic 
current that courses through them 
and is seen in their arms and legs. 
They acquire food by a pair of pin¬ 
cers. They are an animated cell. 

Blossoms are the origin of birds. 
They are both found in the same lo¬ 
cality. Smaller birds are copies of 
some species of plant. Greater birds 
are a growth of whole bushes of blos¬ 
soms. 

If a holyhock blossom should be 
bereft of part of its leaves and caused 
to whirl in the air, like a swallow, it 
would be taken for a swallow. It is 
a converted hollyhock with a diges¬ 
tion that increases its size. Any an¬ 
imal that can digest food like a bird 
can become greater than its origin. 

An animal corresponds in diges- 


108. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


tive organs and development, to the 
development of the plant that afford¬ 
ed it origin. The digestive organs 
of a bird are more developed than 
the snake, because the blossom af¬ 
forded a better development to the 
plant, and its circulation was better 
than the brier, that afforded origin to 
the snake. 

An examination of the creatures of 
the earth, past and present, consid¬ 
ered the most developed, such as the 
domestic animals, will show a devel¬ 
opment corresponding to the devel¬ 
opment of the plants existing at the 
time of the existence of the animal. 

Every bird is a product of blossom. 
The plumage and character of birds 
of a place will correspond to the flow¬ 
ers of a country. On the beak of ev- 

•/ 

ery bird there is a construction from 
*/ 

the pistils or anthers of the blossom. 
Its eyes are another employment of 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


109. 


the openings to the interior of the 
plant. 

In the wings and legs, as in the in¬ 
sect, there is the use of the leaves of 
the blossom, and in the tail a better 
unfoldment of the outer leaves of the 
blossom. A bird that dwells on the 
- ground had its origin in a whole bush 
of blossoms. No bird that had its 
origin in the branch of a bush or tree 
dwells on the ground. The plumage 
is a gaudy dress for use and beauty. 
It is of the same color as the blossom 
that gave it existence, and on the 
back and other parts of the bird, can 
► ' be found all the colors of the blossom. 

The rooster flops his wings as the 

girl wraps a shawl of bright colors, 

and gives an outburst of pride from 

the fence as a human being does of 

glory from an exalted soul. A crow 

growls at au intrusion and a peacock 

screams at an annoyance. A bird’s 

•/ 


110. LA W, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

tail displays the branch of a bush that 
possessed a blossom of which it is a 
copy. In every feather a blossom’s 
leaves are seen of the same shape as 
a plant. 

The kingfisher in its swing on the 
limb over the stream and dive t tiro ugh 
the water, resembles the white and 
blue lilly as it stands and swings in 
the water. 

Some snakes exhibit on their backs 
the pricks of the briar bush, that gave 
them origin. They are often the 
color and appearance of the black¬ 
berry and raspberry. 

The rattlesnake carrries a copy of 

the center bunch of the mulberrv 

• •' 

berry on its tail. Its spots are like 
the bark and jaws like the root. 

When a creature is angry its bite is 
poisonous. The brain or spinal col¬ 
umn is greatly excited. The poison 
is a discharge of a current of electric- 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 111. 

ity of the brain or spine and a small 
amount of its decomposed marrow. 
The sting of any creature is the same 
kind of poison. 

A snake sheds its skin as a plant 
does its foliage. 

A blacksnake is found only where 
there are blackberry bushes; a garter 
or striped snake only where there are 
brier bushes like it. 

The copperhead has the spots and 
color of the yellow apple. The apple 
tree twig gave its origin. The horned 
snake is a better unfoldment of the 
roots of what gave its jaws and horns. 

Whenever the root is in the condi¬ 
tion of a horn, a base of a plant is 
sure to be constructed into what has 
given the horn. 

A sheep has the perfectly unfolded 
roots of a plant. Those of the moose 
are more clumsy. It can rush through 
the woods and turn back the branches 


112.* LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

until their recoil will do him no harm. 
So can the ibex and deer. 

The poisonous cobra-de-capello of 
India, and the naja of Africa, with the 
great piece of foliage in the shape of 
a goitre around their necks, had their 
origin in a plant of similar shape to 
the lady slipper of our forests, on low 
and wet land. On this plant is a 
hood and head like those of the 
snakes. The difference in colors and 
stripes of the leaves, makes the differ¬ 
ence in the colors and stripes of the 
two orders of snakes. Each of these 
miserable creatures shows the pecu¬ 
liarities of the plant, it developed 
from. 

The great reptiles of the tropics are 

only found where there are the same 
#/ 

character and size of vines, twining 
around the same trees, swinging from 
the same branches and with the same 
spots. 


\ 


\ 





' ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. . . .113. 

Iii winding around and swallowing 
its prey, it is copying the plant of its 
origin, in winding around, enveloping 
the tree, and absorbing its vitality. 

The origin of an alligator was the 
soul of a log that decayed in hot, 
slimy water. There is about the same 
development and circulation in the 
alligator and fish, there is in the pine 
and fern. The branches of the pine 
are about the same as those of the 
alligator. The limbs and branches of 
the fern are like the fins and tail of 
a fish. 

All animals that have or had, when 
in existence, a . fin such as fish, had 
their origin in the decayed fern of the 
shores of the water, where such ani¬ 
mals exist or have existed. 

The possession of horns or limbs, 
and fins, is because the origin was of 
the root of the fern and branches of a 
plant more developed, which decom- 


314. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

posed together. 

The fossils of fishes show that only 

«• 

after a greater development of a plant 
than a fern, were such animals in ex¬ 
istence. 

The jaws of the alligator are like 
roots of a pine, with its branches con¬ 
verted into such jaws and teeth. The 
undulating jaw is like the pine root, 
with the teeth for branch roots. 

Whenever an animal had its origin 
in a plant substance out of the earth, 
as the bird and insect, no teeth are 
found. If the origin embraced the 
trunk and root of a plant, teeth and 
other accompaniments are always 
seen. The branches made legs and 
the roots made teeth. No quadruped 
is without the branch roots as teeth 
according to their development. 

A cell is a condensation of a puff 
of electricity at the surface of an or¬ 
gan or body or over a pore in a hem- 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


115 


isphere as a bubble is formed on a 
liquid. 

The electricity will exude through 
the cell that is formed and create an¬ 
other cell to cap the one that is formed. 

Such continued forming of cells 
makes the tissues and body of the 
plant. Channels of circulation for 
the current of electricity are formed 
by its own force, and atoms of earth 
carried into the channels of circula¬ 
tion. If these atoms are not decom¬ 
posed they are thrown out upon the 
surface of the plant and again con¬ 
solidated. This consolidation is the 
bark of the tree. These cells of plants 
are organized into the animal body 
and some of them decomposed, and 
others formed. A cell can be seen 
and understood through a microscope. 

Atoms of substance in the animal’s 
channels of circulation are thrown to 
the surface and also consolidated in- 


116. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


to a better developed bark than that 
of the plant. 

In the animal the substance is 
either animal or plant matter. In the 
plant it is water, atoms of gases and 
fine particles of earth. The covering 
of the alligator and the bark of the 
pine resemble each other, so much, 
that the alligator spread out on the 
sand or stone of the river bank, could 
be easily taken for the pine's cover. 

A reptile corresponds in its philos¬ 
ophy of growth, and construction of 
body, to the plant that afforded its 
origin. 

The growth of a plant is produced 
by a current of electricity discharged 
from the earth, sweeping through the 
plant in its channels of circulation. 
The growth of an animal is produced 
by a current obtained through its 
lungs, or what may answer for lungs, 
from the atmosphere or water, passing 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


117. 


through the channels of circulation 
in the animal. If the channels of cir¬ 
culation in the plant and animal were 
the same, and the substance of their 
food or nourishment the same, their 
covering would appear the same. 

There is a constantly ascending ol¬ 
der of animal creations, correspond¬ 
ing to the constantly ascending order 
of plants. In all the discovered fos¬ 
sils of the animal kingdom and in the 
still existing species, a plant unfold- 

ment was followed by an animal un- 

«, 

foldment. In every species of an an¬ 
imal there is only the product of the 
previous unfoldment of a new order 
of plants. 

The leaves, blossoms, fruit, branch¬ 
es and bark of plants correspond in 
character and amount to their chan¬ 
nels of circulation. If the channels 
are large and extend in one direction, 
the plant will grow in that direction, 


118. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


except the creation of a stalk corres¬ 
ponding' to the length or height of 
the plant. If the circulation is in the 
direction of its surface, it will have a 
large stalk and branches, with thick 
bark. If it has many channels it will 
have many branches. If but one or 
a few it will only be supplied with 
leaves. 

The same philosophy of develop¬ 
ment is found in the animal and hu¬ 
man body. 

The difference of the unfoldment of 
the animal is in more constructions, of 
the same character. 

The origin of an animal can be 
found with certainty by examining 
its organs of circulation. 

The alligator is as limited in circu¬ 
lation as the earlier growth of pines 
or developed ferns. 

The shell is the undecomposed 
atoms in its blood thrown to the sur- 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 119. 

face and consolidated. The circula¬ 
tion being limited the atoms are not 

If the circulation is as great as in 
the mammal the atoms will be decom¬ 
posed lpore, and sufficient circulation 
made to produce hair. 

If in a very warm country the heat 
of the atmosphere with that of the 
body will run the substance into sheets 
instead of hair, in the shape of rind, 
as seen in the rhinoceros, hippopota¬ 
mus and elephant. At the greater 
slopes of the bodies of these animals 
there is an avalanche of this rind. 

In the pear of the garden the same 
construction of substance is seen, oc¬ 
casioned by the • greater circulation. 
The base will decay faster on account 
of the rupture of its cells at the base 
by the avalanche of fluids from the 
top. 

In the greater consolidation of this 



120. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


substance in the rhinoceros it appears 
like shell or horn. 

The mastodon of all cold countries 
are furnished with hair instead of rind 
because of their greater circulation. 
Instead of melting into sheets it was 
made into tubes and a current of elec¬ 
tricity passed out of each one. 

The current of electricity that pass¬ 
es out of a hair creates heat by the 

t 

vibration of the moisture in the at- 
• mosphere around the orifice of es¬ 
cape. 

The electricity that is not used to 
throw out undecomposed substance 
from the blood is discharged at the 
eye, horns and teeth. 

Look at the eyes, horns, and teeth 
of the rhinoceros and the trunk of an 
elephant, and behold what a corner 
of marrow can do when assisted by a 
current of electricity from the blood! 

The alligator is but little different 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


121. 


from the. lizard. Their origin will 
be found in the same class of plants. 

The gavial of the Ganges and the 
cayman of South America are as sim- 

t/ 

ilar to the organization of the alliga¬ 
tor as the trees that gave them origin 
are to the pine. 

Every turtle was a developed coral 
clump, different in shape only in its 
arms and legs. The body is without 
bones, but on the under side of the 
upper part of the shell, there is a par¬ 
tial development of a backbone and 
ribs, copied from the phantom or soul 
of the coral. 

All fish, except one variety, had 
their origin in the crinoid, algae or 
land plants that decayed in the water. 

The origin of the whale is seen in 
its construction. And no more a 
wonder than the creation of about the 
same shape, from a mass of gases, in a 
warm and filthy cellar, in a summer 



122. 


LAW, OH PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


night, or where several plants have de¬ 
cayed in the yard. 

The gases from which it was con¬ 
structed were from the decomposing 
bodies of animals and plants, rolled 
into a corner of the waters, in the 
bend of tropical shores. Their pad¬ 
dles, jaws and tapering organs called 
whalebones, resemble the older ferns, 
which gave their origin. Compare 
their tissues, fibers and branches, with 
those of the fern. 

No creations of animals like those 
described have been developed since 
man was created, except the elephant 
and camel. 

The difference between the fish and 
plant is in the way the organs mani¬ 
festing motion and life, were given. 

No animal is more than a devel¬ 
oped plant, made capable of getting 
its own nourishment. It does not get 
it from the soil. Every plant is de- 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


123. 


pendent upon the earth for its nour¬ 
ishment and development. 

Here is the dividing line. A plant 
developed into an animal is released 
from its dependence on the earth to 
feed it, and is able to work in a wav 
to continue its own existence. 

The elephant is a great combination 
of the decomposed bodies of human 
beings, that were buried in heaps 
where the people were in the habit of 
burying their dead, in mounds, in past 
periods. The feet are descriptions of 
the toes and feet of human beings, 
supposed to bewaiting a different res¬ 
urrection. The joints of the legs are 
a clumsy copying of the knees of the 
inhabitants of the plains of Asia and 
Africa. 

In the great eve there is something 
more than the sight of a mean soul.. 
See how they resemble the human 
eve. In their wisdom and affection 


124. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


they are resembling: the human mind. 

J CJ 

They are found only with these 
«/ «/ 

mounds of the human dead. Evi¬ 
dence is found that its creation was 
later than the creation of man. In 
each country where they exist they 

• ft/ ft/ 

have a difference corresponding to 
the character, complexion and organ¬ 
izations of the earliest people of such 

country. 

# 

If its origin, and that of the camel, 
are not as stated, will you state how 
they did get upon the earth ? 

The camel had its origin similar to 
the elephant and where the more Ar¬ 
abic jews were first living. In no 
creature or plant is there any con¬ 
struction that could be converted into 
a creature capable of carrying such 
burdens and of existing so long with¬ 
out food or water. It is found onlv in 
the places where it is a necessity. Its 
face expresses the pitiable suffering 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


125. 

of this people under the yoke of a 
brutal tryant, whose suffering degra¬ 
dation was far beyond any history. 
They have the eye, forehead, brain 
and whiskers of this people and lips 
of human capacity. Their origin is a 
whole stack of these entombed peo¬ 
ple. , 

The ferocious character of the car- 
niverous animals, such as the tiger, 
lion, wolf and bear is caused by a 
great breadth of brain. In the hu¬ 
man being the difference in the kind 
of work performed by a great breadth 
of brain is in that part of the brain 
that directs the employment of the 
power. This enables man to get a 
living by peacable means; and an¬ 
imals that live on vegetables to be 
contented with vegetable diet. 

The tiger will exhaust its strength 
in a short time if not supplied with 
the magnetic force of another animal’s 


120. LAW, OR'PHOTOGRAPHS OK CREATION. 

blood and flesh. It is in the same 
condition of the person who is in the 
habit of using alcoholic stimulants. 
His condition is abnormal without 
such an exciting influence. The al¬ 
cohol gives the blood an excitement 
by decomposing a part of the stomach 
and the food in it. The same philos¬ 
ophy is seen in the use of opium, and 
in the desire of a child or person to 
get out of doors, where the blood 
can be supplied with the electricity 
of the atmosphere. 

A brain is a mass of cells the same 
as any other cells of the body, except 
that the brain cells are constructed 
from the blood that is sweeping along 
the spinal column and the many small 
blood vessels through the brain. They 
are generally larger than the other 
cells of the body. This is the reason 
the brain is so large in proportion to 
its weight. 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


127. 


An animal has a brain in propor¬ 
tion to the circulation of its plant ori¬ 
gin. Every plant large enough to af¬ 
ford an emanation for an animal or-. 
ganization can create a brain in the 
animal as great as its own organiza¬ 
tion will produce. The foliage of a 
plant is the measurment of its circu¬ 
lation. The reason the animal’s brain 
appears so much like a plant is be¬ 
cause all animals are developed from 
plants. The advancement of the 
plant organizations are copied in the 

advancement of the animal species. 

Every animal with horns except a 

few reptiles and fish, exist on plants. 
Some herbiferous animals are without 
horns. They are unable to destrov 
other animals. Such animals have 
narrow heads and not sufficient brains 
to construct horns. Those with horns 
have broader heads. 

With the tiger and other ferocious 
animals the force of brains that is 


9 


128. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

used in making horns on the cow, and 
the like, is used in contracting the 
muscles. 

If you can imagine what a decay¬ 
ing zebra will give a slimy and warm 
pool in a swamp you will have the 
origin of the tiger. He hunts such a 
place for his lair. He carries the 
stripes of the zebra. The long, une¬ 
ven hair are copies of the grass that 
decayed where the zebra's dead body 
was. 

The lion is a better development of 
a hyena and he is as cowardly and 
mean in all his habits. 

The character of an animal will dis¬ 
close the species of its plant origin. 
It bears the same degree of develop¬ 
ment to a higher animal organization 
that the same amount of unfoldment 
has to the greater development of 
vegetable orders. 

The difference in the orders of ani- 

* _ 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


129. 


mals, and every change in form, is a 
consequence of greater means for the 
operation of electricity to give life 
and motion. 

All the habits of the plant are rep¬ 
resented by the animal that was de¬ 
rived from it. 

The cypress, fir, pine, spruce, hem¬ 
lock and other species of plants are 
protected from the cold by a construc¬ 
tion of boughs and a kind of hair, 
and are not destroyed when an addi¬ 
tional clothing of boughs takes place. 
This clothing protects the orifices for 
the escape of the electricity or power 
of growth from the frost, which would 
cause the plant to decay. 

On plants so developed as to have 
foliage that drop off every season, 
there is a construction of leaf, on a 
stem, that will exist after the leaf has 
decayed. It is so small the cold af¬ 
fects it but little, and there are but few 


13n. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


twigs for the development of leaves. 

Compare the base of a stem of a 
leaf that has fallen from a plant, with 
the base of a hair that falls from the 
cow or horse in the spring. Every 
animal whose origin was a plant, that 
shed its leaves when they were com¬ 
pletely developed, will shed its hair 
when the hair is completely devel¬ 
oped. 

The horse sheds his hair annually in 
a slow and imperfect manner. This 
is the characteristic of the more ad¬ 
vanced pines. They cast off a part of 
the sporting branches, which makes 
them look in their season of greatest 
growth considerably like the oak or 
maple. 

The mane and tail are the boughs 
allowed to grow on the horse. The 
hair of the mane and tail is construct¬ 
ed like a point on a bough of the pine, 
and it will decompose as quickly. The 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


131. 


horse will swing his head and toss his 
mane and tail as proudly as the great 
pine tree. His neigh and snort are 
like the blast of wind on its top. The 
pattern of his hoof is found in the 
spindles of the bough of a pine tree 
branch. Passing the hand under a 
bunch of these spindles and pressing 
one side against the other will furnish 
a copy, as well as the origin of the 
horse’s hoof. 

The hoofs of the camel, deer, hog, 
bison and other animals that have di¬ 
vided hoofs, are constructions from the 
decomposed marrow in the bones of 
the leg, which are allowed to consoli¬ 
date into two claws instead of one. 
The waste material of the marrow of 
the bones, nerves or brain, that are 
sufficiently consolidated gives the hu¬ 
man hand its nails, the bear or tiger 
its claws, and all the animals of every 
character their claws, teeth, horns and 
tusks. 


132. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

Our optic nerves are all the while 
discharging the same kind of waste 
material, which is carried and thrown 
out at the nostrils. 

In the marrow of every nerve, brain 
or bone there is a constant decompo¬ 
sition of the cells of which this sub- 
stance is composed. And all the de¬ 
composed or partly decomposed par¬ 
ticles are discharged at the surface or 
ends of such masses. It is the amount 
of such decomposed substance that 
such an organ can discharge, which 
is found in every claw, hoof, horn, 
tusk, tooth, nail or eye that is or ever 
was constructed. 

The size of the bone or marrow in 
it, and the size of the nerve or brain 
will determine the amount of the con¬ 
struction of this decomposing process. 

If a horse acquired his hoofs by a 
curtailment of this process of develop¬ 
ing claws, an animal as great as a 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


133. 


small mountain would have been nec¬ 
essary, to give the contracted claws 
the size of a horse’s hoofs. 

The corpuscles of the milk of this 
animal are like those seen oozing 
from the branches and trunk of the 
pine tree. It coats the places of its 
escape, as the milk of the cow will 
coat the cloth it soils. 

The corpuscles not needed to con¬ 
struct the tissues of the tree are con¬ 
structed on its surface, and become 
hardened into gum and in time into a 
bulb of wood on the tree. 

In this capacity of the plant to give 
its surface a year’s growth of useless 
corpuscles, there is all the philosophy 
of a human or animal mother giving 
the product of her gestation, for a 
season, a comfortable dinner at the 
contracted parts of her breasts. 

In straining the blood of the animal 
of the sediment and burned corpus- 


f 




134. LA W,()R PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

cles, which produces in the glands of 
the breast whole corpuscles, there is a 
copying of the straining process of 
the plant that produces a whole cell 
on its surface. 

In every country where a mammal 
is, there is a milk producing plant. 
Such an animal cannot lie found 
where there are no such plants. Only 
where there is a development of plants 
as great as there is in this country, 
will there be any great variety of 
mammals. 

There are very few where it is too 
cold or too hot. At the equator a 
few cat like creatures. Near the 
poles a bear. 

Only undecomposed or whole cor¬ 
puscles are passed through these 
glands. The burned corpuscles give 
the blood its reddish color. In the 
milk the corpuscles are all transpar¬ 
ent. The milk will seem like water 




ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


13 f>. 


when seen through a microscope. 
The white color is an optical illusion. 

Butter is the cells separated from 
the water and fibrine of the glands of 
the female. The agitation of the milk 
causes the corpuscles to settle in 
groups and unite in a mass. 

If a current of electricity is dis- 

1/ 

charged through the milk the churn¬ 
ing will be instantly performed. 

The cow shows the plant it is a cre- 
tion from, by the character of the hair 

7 %J 

on its neck and tail. The willow 
branches are seen in the tail. On its 
neck is a copy of the covering of the 
willow, the growth of which consti¬ 
tutes the mane of the animal. The 
willow grows best in a wet place. She 
consumes a great quantity of water 
and gives a great quantity of milk. 

Fruit raisers know that fruit is cul¬ 
tivated with success when the plants 
are associated in groups. A plant af- 


m. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION 



fords a similar plant assistance cor¬ 
responding to its own development 

and the susceptibility of the other 
plant. All around the earth these 
plant commencements of animal life 
are accompanying each other in 
groups and forests. 

They develop only in assemblies. 
When unaccompanied by others they 
perish. The reason for this is that all 
plants are exerting an influence on 
their species and according to their 
distance apart. 

The aroma of the pine apple can be 
smelled a thousand feet away. The 
magnetic influence that produces this 
aroma at that distance and enables 
the organs of smell to appreciate it, 
will extend to the corners of the whole 
continent, and impress other pine 
apples of the form and character of the 
plant. 

A plant converts a germ from its 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 


137. 


seed into a plant like itself, by its 
magnetic influence, on the substance 
of its germ. All plants cause their 
seed to copy them by photographing 
their forms upon their germs, in a 
state of development to permit the re¬ 
ception of their influence. 

Every plant obtains its form and 
character in this way, and it is seen 
in the effects of the influence of cer¬ 
tain species of plants on the species 
of a similar character in the same lo¬ 
cality. 

Some animals are as sagacious as 
such plants. They are impressed with 
the existence of their species miles 
away. The aroma of their cover of 
hair, wool or feathers like that of the 
pine apple, is their telegraph operator. 
Dogs, wolves and foxes are so sensi¬ 
tive of such impressions that they will 
call upon distant companions and ask 
them to call in return. 


138. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

The same philosophy is seen in 
hatching a chicken when the in¬ 
cubation takes place in the absence 
of the parent bird. A magnetic cur¬ 
rent converts the object in the egg 
into a creature like the one from 
whose organization it was produced. 
In an egg there is a quantity of cor¬ 
puscles or cells and substance pro¬ 
duced by a decomposition of cells. 
The yolk is the decomposed substance. 
The white the undecomposed. An 
egg will become all yolk if without a 
phantom emanation from a plant or 
blossom, and given time to decom¬ 
pose. The white is yellow if decom¬ 
posed as much as the yolk. 

In the creation of the egg there is 
time for a partial decomposition. The 
decomposed portion not thrown to 
the surface and consolidated into 
shell, as our bones are constructed 
around the marrow in them, is 


ORIGIN OF ANIMALS. 139. 

congregated at the focus of the 
egg, which is caused as a stone in 

the gall or urinary bladder is caused. 

It is a collection of crystalizations. 
The cells of the egg cause the decom¬ 
posed parts to crystalize, in the same 
way that all crystalizations take place. 
The process commences at the focus 
of the egg for the reason that a focus 
of the current of electricity that is 
sweeping around the egg is created 
at this point. 

This perfect illustration of the orbit 
of a planet around a focus of the cur¬ 
rent of electricity of the solar system, 
is a disclosure of the cause of a plan¬ 
et’s revolution, and the shape of its 
orbit. 

The character of the current at the 
focus of the egg is what is taking- 
place at the focus of our solar system. 
It is a concentrated current, at a point 
where there is only a rotary motion 




140. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

of its substance. The decomposed 
substance of the egg commences to 
congregate, at the center of the cur¬ 
rent as any substance whirled in a 
fluid will congregate in the center. 

Every ocean current produces a 
similar congregation of matter. In 
an egg there is as regular a circula¬ 
tion as there is in an animal or human 
body. It is wholly of the current of 
electricity that is generated in the de¬ 
composition of the egg. 

In the egg the same operation takes 
place that takes place in the solar 
system. An egg with several yolks, 
rings of small particles of decomposed 
cells around each yolk, and a convoy 
of moons for each yolk, would be a 
very good picture of the solar system. 

If this egg did not contain one of 
the etherial copies of a decaying 
or decayed blossom, the whirling cur¬ 
rent would decompose every corpus- 


141. 


. . . ORIGIN OF ANIMALS: 

' r ■ ^ « 

ele in the egg, and accomplish noth¬ 
ing more. 

A bird is one step more of unfold- 
rnent than an insect, and one step less 
than a mammal. The possession by 
an egg of a creation that will cause 
its decomposing substance to cling to 
its parts, would cause the thing to be 
clothed with the substance only. And 

tv 

if the object was not changed in form 
it would be a construction of the 
same shape still. If gradually changed 
by a creature’s influence, in a way to 
cause it to possess the form of that 
creature, it will become a creation of 
that character so far as form is con¬ 
cerned. 

If given a current of the influence 
that produces life, it will become a 
living creature of that shape. The 
changes that take place in the shell 
are the decomposition of the cells, 
the conversion of the creation from 


/ 


142. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OK CREATION. 

the plant into a different form, and 
bursting the shell. 

The feathers, bones, claws, beak 
and every organ of the bird construct¬ 
ed of cells is produced by usual 
growth. As soon as the chick re¬ 
ceives the current of life it commences 
eating what is in the shell and through 
its digestion these organs are grown. 

The extent of its beak and claws is 
so great the pressing the feet against 
the shell, causes the beak to penetrate 
the shell. 

Thus, the head of the chick is first 
seen. The sex is produced by the 
magnetic control of the embryo, by 
the parent or both parents. 

In what is called the male bird there 
is a considerable excitement of the 
anus produced by a rapid decompo¬ 
sition of the substance in the intes¬ 
tine. The difference in the decompo¬ 
sition of the substance in the stom- 


ORKHN OF ANIMALS. 


143 . 


ach and intestines is what prevents 
an egg forming in the male and cre¬ 
ates finer and more beautiful feath¬ 
ers. The difference in the decompo¬ 
sition of the feathers causes the differ¬ 
ence in colors. 



144. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 



y. 

ORIGIN OF HUMAN RACES. 


The same work of changing the 
form of the gaseous emanation of an 
animal and giving it a covering of 
hydrogen of the water in vapor, that 
gave the animal its origin, was per¬ 
formed in giving the human race ori¬ 
gin. When the earth was covered 
with fog and other impurities, a hu¬ 
man body was constructed of hydro¬ 
gen gas. After the atmosphere w r as 
cleared of its dampness and warmth, 
a human womb was provided. 



ORIGIN OF HUMAN RACES. 


145. 


The being; was a mollusk in body, 
without bone, blood or hair. It exist¬ 
ed but a few seasons and decomposed 
as quickly as an insect. A chapter 
of human existence was blotted out 
bv the destruction of the bodies of the 

%J 

first creation. There is no evidence 
of the existence of such objects, ex¬ 
cept in the discovery of the process 
of constructing all original creatures. 

The construction of all orders of 
creation, below the human, is a source 
for the creation of the human family. 
In the atmosphere of every country 
where animals exist, there are great 
numbers of these gaseous emanations, 
from which the human offspring is 
created. If this is correct, it is the 
discovery of the very wisdom of crea¬ 
tion, and its methods from the atom 
to man. 

I believe the statements I make in 
regard to the force called electricity. 

c5 * 


146. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


Following it through all the affairs of 
nature will disclose the plan of crea¬ 
tion and its analysis. It is only when 

• • 

the entire problem is in the mind, that 
any portion of it can be fairly consid¬ 
ered. 

It is seen that mankind did not 
have a common origin, in the immov¬ 
able fact, that the original features of 
a race are never eradicated. There is 
no race of people on the earth whose 
existence has been long enough to 
obliterate, through any agencies, the 
original characters of the faces of its 
people. 

When it is stated that the object 
evolved by an animal organization, is 
the thing from which the human off¬ 
spring is created, it is meant: that a 
construction of the same character 
and form of the animal, except with¬ 
out life or consciousness, is actually 
emanated from the coarser parts of' 


\ 


ORIGIN OF HUMAN RACES. 


147. 


the animal’s body at its death, that 
it is in existence after the death and 
decomposition of the animal, that it 
is imbibed at the moment of the in¬ 
ception of pregnancy, by the human 
mother, and by the influence she can 

»p 

exert on this object; when in her 
body, it is transformed into a human 
being. It is because the origin of 
the human being was an animal that 
the mother can attract the animal 
emanation and repel others. 

In the unfoldment of the bird, ani¬ 
mal, or human being, there is a repe¬ 
tition of the process, that creates an 
insect in vinegar or in any filthy or 
warm substance, in a state of decom¬ 
position. In every species of gener¬ 
ation of life, there is only a spontane¬ 
ous generation of this condition of 
existence. 

To acknowledge electricity, as the 
source of life, is a great assistance in 


148. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

understanding the mystic affairs of 
nature. It will commence life in the 
egg or follicle. In the constructions 
of a similar character in insects, there 
is only a decomposition of part of 
them in order to inaugurate life in 
the other part. It is these decompos¬ 
ing parts of such follicles in the small¬ 
er creatures, that have been denomi¬ 
nated the male organs of generation. 
Where copulation is not permitted in 
animal species or insects, the source 
of life is in every instance the electric- 
ity generated by the decomposing 
follicles or cells of the parent. In 
every instance of the generation of 
life by the employment of the office 
of copulation of the male with the 
female, there is a greater excitement 
of the female organ of procreation. 
It is a decomposition of follicles, that 

is giving the male organization the 
means of accomplishing this excite¬ 
ment. 


ORIGIN OF HUMAN RACES. 


149. 


In all the operations of this charac¬ 
ter, there is identically the same de¬ 
composition of follicles, in the male 
organization, that produces the ex¬ 
citement of the organs of reproduc¬ 
tion in the female, that takes place in 
the decomposing follicles of the insect, 
or any of the lower animals that pos¬ 
sess both the male and female organs 
in the same body. The decomposi¬ 
tion of such follicles or cells produces 
the current of electricity, that charges 
the great magnet in the female body, 
and renders it capable of attracting 
into it the creation, she is able to con¬ 
vert into a being like herself. 

The claim that an insect, of the 

same character, that is generated in 

any decomposing cells of the body, 

can enter the womb of the female, 

and in some wav become an animal 

•/ 

like the mother, possessing all the 
qualifications for producing a continu- 


150. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

ation of the species, is unfounded. 
The substance in which these insects 
are claimed to be generated for this 
purpose, is only the broken down fol¬ 
licles and cells, that are decomposed 
in the excitement of copulation, and 
which, if allowed to corrode and poi¬ 
son the body, produce the disease 
called syphilis. The animals that ap¬ 
pear in this decomposing substance, 
are the transformations of the cells of 
these follicles into small insects, as in 
every case of conversion of cells in- 
to animalcule. They cannot repro¬ 
duce themselves and can exist but a 
few minutes. 

In confirmation of what is being 
stated concerning the origin of the 
human being, examine the plates rep¬ 
resenting the stages of unfoldment in 
the human and animal embryo, in any 
physiology or comparative anatomy. 

A whole race of human beings was 


ORIGIN OF HUMAN RACES. 


151. 


given an origin by the direct applica¬ 
tion of the Divine will, upon the ema¬ 
nation of an animal organization, in 
both the male and female creation. 
In the origin of the different human 
races, there were as many different 
species of animal creatures employed 
as there are different appearing races. 

In the faces and organs of every 
race of men that the earth is possessed 
of, there is all the evidence required 
to discover what was the origin of 
such race. In the habits and dispo¬ 
sitions of each race there is a copying 
of the attributes of the animal from 
which the race was created. 

In the face of the American Indian 
a panther’s countenance is seen. The 
flash of his eye is like that of the 
panther, and in the whole character 
of the Indian the character of the 
beast is discovered. They are at 
home in the forest. Both will prowl 


152. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

at night upon a foe and delight in a 
carousal of cruelty. 

The panther takes only a sip of 
blood from its victim’s throat. The 
Indian carries away the scalp of his 
foe. They will both pounce upon 
their prey from an ambush in a sud¬ 
den and irresistable manner. They 

• ■ 

can be civilized and improved only bv 
removing them from the association 
of ferocious brutes, and from the con¬ 
fines of a forest. 

A gorilla is pictured in the negro, 
in every feature of the man, and in 
his color, habits and licentuous na¬ 
ture. Both creatures are black, with 
flat noses, thick lips, great, strong un¬ 
derjaws and an eye like a baboon. 
A gorilla is found only in Africa. It 
is content in a swamp, where the sun 
does not shine, which is only fit for 
such a creature to exist in. When 
this creature is tormented it shows 


ORIGIN OF HUMAN RACES 


153. 


the same disposition that is seen in 

the infuriated negro. 

The Chinese was the earliest race. 

In the features of the Chinaman are 
seen the features of a crocodile, so far 
as the human organization can pro¬ 
duce them. The inclined and sleepy 
eyes of the Chinaman are those of a 
crocodile in a half human form of 
head. The nose of this being is a 
c ontraeted nose of the brute with the 
nostrils a little more inclined. His 
mouth and jaws are a contraction of 
the mouth and jaws of the animal. 
The disposition is the same as the rep¬ 
tile, and he is as ferocious when an¬ 
gered. The Chinese dwell on rafts 
and boats in multitudes, by the shores 
and in the rivers of China, and when 
hungry go on shore for food. The 
crocodile will lie on logs and on the 
banks of streams, and when hungry, 
olunge into the water and prowl about 
or food. 



154 . 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


In buildings, in the Chinese empire 
can be seen a crocodile made of wood 
and other material, and stood on its 
tail. In boats there is another con¬ 
struction of a crocodile form, and in 
some, copies of the scales of this ani¬ 
mal can be found. In their works of 
art this creature is portrayed. They 
are incapable of further civilization. 

The Hindoo has a great resemblance 
to the vulture and similarity of habits. 
The feet and hands are small and 
slim. The eyes and nose are copies, 
to a great extent, of the eyes and 
beak of the vulture. He wears a tur¬ 
ban resembling that of the vulture or 
condor. The color is as dark as the 
vulture. He scours the country from 
an eminence to discover his plunder. 
The vulture soars over the country or 
watches from a crag, from which to 
descend upon its prey. 

The features and habits of the Es- 


ORIGIN OF HUMAN RACES. 


155 . 


quimaux are obtained from the polar 
bear. They are different only in hay- 

%J %J 

ing a hut, and a few implements for 
killing fish and walruses. Their food 
and thefts are the same. They are 
confined to the same latitudes, and 
would perish as quickly if compelled 
to live in a warm latitude. 

There is no evidence that the Cau¬ 
casian is the race from which the 
European and English nations de¬ 
scended. The Caucasian is an Arab, 
more civilized and with a better com¬ 
plexion, in a different atmosphere. 
The Caucasian has the same condi¬ 
tion of hair that the cashmere or an- 
gora goat has. 

These docile and splendid organi¬ 
zations are the origin of the decend- 
ants of the race of people that built 
the cities of Persia, Palestine and the 
Nile. Their great numbers compelled 
an emigration to all parts of the world 


156. LAW, OB PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

adjoining their native country. The 
pure Caucasian is as graceful, gener¬ 
ous, progressive, enterprising and in¬ 
telligent a people as were ever upon 
the world. They have performed a 
greater amount of intellectual labor 
for mankind than all the rest of the 
human family. 

A Caucasian female is as beautiful 
a creature as the earth possesses. A 
more devoted object to her husband 
and offspring is not in existence. 

There is a wonderful caricaturing 
of this goat in these splendid people. 
All the goats of that country have a 
white covering of hair which becomes 
darker only when transported to other 
countries. These goats are a con¬ 
version of the evergreen. The hair 
is a different exhibition of the points 
or spindles of this plant. It is a gen 
erous and docile creature. In its 
long face, sharp nose and whiskers it 


ORIGIN OF HUMAN RACES. 


157. 


resembles the Caucasian. 

The Irish are noted for a quick 
perception of a wrong, and quick to 
avenge the wrong, and to constantly 
agitate a grievance real or fanciful. 
The faces of the uncultivated natives 
of the Evergreen Island are almost 
copies of the face of the bull dog. 

In almost the entire nation the stub¬ 
born, sullen and sometimes the stupid 

appearance of this animal, is exhibit¬ 
ed. The shuffling walk of the more 
uncultivated, is as much like this ani¬ 
mal, as the movements of a human 
organization well can be. When a 
chance is given to overcome a foe, 
there is likely to be a massacre as 
well as a victory. A bull dog origi¬ 
nated on the coast of Ireland, from 
an undeveloped spruce. Its spindles 
are seen in the ribs and in the corner 
of the upper jaw, along the bone of 
the nose. The bull dog is never sat- 


158. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OP CREATION. 

isfied until its antagonist is dead. 
The uncultivated Irishman is often a 
loiterer, prone to carouse, fight and 
drink while his companion is toiling 
for bread and nursing her children. 
It is the cultivation and inter-mar¬ 
riage, that gives the Irish character 
so much influence and power in dif¬ 
ferent parts of the world. 

In the genuine specimen of the 
Anglo Saxon race, a full presentation 
of the features of the mastiff is given. 
This noble animal was the actual pro¬ 
tection of this race, from the wild 
beasts and savages of the forest, 
when the race was so ignorant and 
helpless, it could not protect itself or 
perpetuate its existence without a 
protector of this character. All the 
more admirable qualities of the mas¬ 
tiff are found in the Anglo Saxon. 
The fact, that a human being was a 
creation from the canine species of 


ORIGIN OF HUMAN RACES. 


159 


animal, is the cause, that in all parts 
of Europe renders certain species of 
dogs so excessively fond of man. 
Dogs of different varieties from the 
European have no more attachment 
for the human being than a foe or a 
bear. The mastiff originated upon a 
plain of the Rhine, from a better de¬ 
veloped spruce. 

On every island of the globe capa¬ 
ble of supporting human life, a race 
of the human character was created. 

The arms, legs and faces of the 
Australian are like the kangaroo. 
They are docile, harmless and incapa¬ 
ble of accomplishing anything of tal¬ 
ent and energy. They seldom build 
huts or fix buildings but content 
themselves with a bark or bough for 
shelter. The kangaroo is only able 
to eat and sleep, and is without com¬ 
plete forepaws like other animals. Its 
color is but little different from that 


360. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


of the Australian. 

The New Zealander is in his feat¬ 
ures and habits like the chimpanzee. 
This animal was his origin. The an¬ 
imal was destroyed before the island 
was discovered. 

The Sandwich Islanders are as in¬ 
dolent, selfish, dirty and sensual as 
the native hog that constituted their 
origin. 

In the island of San Domingo there 
was only a guinea pig and cayman, 
from which the natives could obtain 
their origin. So little is known of 
these people that it is impossible to 
tell which was the origin. 

The aborigines of Borneo had their 
origin in the vulture, like the natives 
of India. 

The natives of the Island of Mada¬ 
gascar have a resemblance to the ape, 
that was their origin. 

From the lower part of the Rocky 


ORIGIN OF HUMAN RACES. 


161. 


Mountains, to the lower part of the 
Andes, there were more or less ad¬ 
vanced races of people, before any 
foreign people were upon these shores. 
It was as much an independent exis¬ 
tence of races, on the slopes of these 
mountains, as the existence of the 
Chinese or African. 

They resembled the North Ameri- 
1 / 

can Indian, and had their origin in a 
panther of larger size. When they 
became so numerous as to compel a 
migration to the plains, and dwell 
where a great number of cattle and 
inoffensive animals were found, they 
became civilized, numerous and pow¬ 
erful. They constituted the com¬ 
mencement of the reign of autocrats 
called Incas. 

On the table land of Mexico there 
existed a docile, gentle and indus¬ 
trious people like the Caucasian, con¬ 
siderably cultivated, who had their 


162. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

origin in a goat of a darker color. 
They were contented only on elevated 
places, and in pure atmosphere. They 
were affectionate, and so peacable, 
that a handful of adventurers cap¬ 
tured the whole country. Every sac¬ 
rifice of life by these Aztecs was for 
a religious purpose. 

In Central America there is a degrad¬ 
ed people having origin in the Jaguar. 
They are nearly as black as the negro, 
as brutal as the North American In¬ 
dian, as degraded as the Australian 
and as indolent as the Sandwich Is¬ 
lander. 

A race of savages was created on 
the Rocky Mountain slopes like our In¬ 
dians whose character was changed 

cj 

by their admixture with the Aztecs. 


I 


/ 

GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 163. 


Yl. 

GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE 

HUMAN BODY. 


The circuit of electricity given the 
animal emanation for its growth is 
the all competent agent of growth 
for the foetus and human body. A 

%J 

brain and spinal nerve are first con¬ 
structed, they having more of the at¬ 
tracting force of electricity. The cells 
or corpuscles of the mother’s ovaries 
are attracted to and accumulated upon 
these parts, as the magnet attracts 




\ 







164. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

and holds filings of the same metal. 
When these are completed, the small 
nerves or branches are constructed. 
Then a stomach, intestines, oesopha¬ 
gus, and at the same time the blood 
vessels are constructed bv the same 
process. 

The only thing produced by growth 
is a cell, and only fat and muscles 
are constructed from cells. After the 
organs constructed from the corpus¬ 
cles of the mother are finished, the 
offspring can swallow, digest the food, 
and pass both water and corpuscles 
of food to the blood vessels. The 
Almighty will capacity for using only 
such parts of the animal phantom as 
are necessary for the human being 
and changing the form, is the current 
of electricity given the womb. An 
instant only elapses after the com¬ 
pletion of the channels of circulation 
before a gullet, without jaws or any 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 165. 


organ at its top, is swallowing the 
corpuscles of the ovaries, and which 
are brought to the gullet by a cur¬ 
rent of electricity coining into the 
stomach through the gullet. A con¬ 
tinued swallowing of corpuscles and 
a digestion fills the channels of cir¬ 
culation with blood. 

All corpuscles and water not passed 
into the channels of circulation are 
passed to the intestines and further 
digested. The electricity generated 
by this digestion strengthens mother 
and child. The substance passed to 
the intestines is retained in them till 
after birth. The digestion of' corpus¬ 
cles fills the channels of circulation, 
gives a substance for the growth of 
organs and furnishes a current for 

the delivery of the child to the atmos- 

•/ 

phere. Portions of the substance 
swallowed, is found in the intestines 
and stomach of the child, after birth, 


166. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF (JREATK)N. 

before any food is swallowed. 

The umbilical connects the stomach 
of the child with the nervous system 
of the parent by which she assists its 
digestion. After blood is in the chan¬ 
nels of circulation, the plan of growth 
is changed to the construction of cells 
and a pressing of corpuscles out of 
the blood, and consolidation of the 
destroyed portions of the marrow of 
the brain, bones and nerves. 

A current of electricity passing 
through the blood, increased by the 
electricity generated by burning, 
the corpuscles of the blood, constructs 
the cells. A cell is made by the cur- 
rent of electricity consolidating at the 
opening of a pore of a blood vessel. 
A tissue is a continued line of cells 
given a hole through them by a cur¬ 
rent of electricity, as it puffs its way 
along. All corpuscles not burned up 
by the current of electricity in the 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 167. 


blood are pressed out of the blood 
vessels, at their turns and greater 
ends, and made into what are called 
glands. Properly speaking, fat and 
muscles are the only organs made of 
cells. 

* 

Fat is packing the crevices of the 
body, which completes the form. All 
fat can be removed without incapaci¬ 
tating the person for labor or motion. 

A construction of fat would com¬ 
mence again at once. Fat is a mass 
of cells, constructed like the bubble 
of any fluid, differing only in the den¬ 
sity of their walls. A muscle is a lobe 
of fat a little burned by the current 
of electricity which gives the red col¬ 
or and appearance of fiber. 

A burning of a tissue by a warm 
blood converts fat into muscle. The 
marrow in the bones and skull is little 
more than a mass of corpuscles, ob¬ 
tained in the mother's womb. They 


m. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

are the original centers of attraction 
that originate the development of the 
human body. 

Cartilage is partly consolidated 
bone, always connected with a bone 
The marrow corpuscles are decom¬ 
posed by the current of electricity, 
and a part of the sediment or carbon 
parts of burnt corpuscles thrown to 
the surface, and solidified into bone. 

Every part of the body, if decom¬ 
posed by electricity to the same ex¬ 
tent that the marrow in the bones is, 
in the life time of a person, will 
become white and imperfect car¬ 
bon like the bones. The decom¬ 
position of marrow generates electric¬ 
ity which is discharged at every ori¬ 
fice of these bones into the atmos¬ 
phere. If it could not be discharged 
in this way the bones would explode. 
The suppression of such currents caus¬ 
es rheumatism, gout, headache, and 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 1(59. 


sometimes an eruption of the bones 
and flesh of the character of felon or 
discharge of bone under a contusion. 

The parts that are not allowed to 
inCrustate on the surface of bone are 
deposited in the blood, and some of 
these carbon particles are swept 
around the system, and the rest of 
them are thrown on the surface, and 
consolidated over the pores into hair. 

The portion in the blood is dis¬ 
charged at the surface of the body 
and its slight consolidation is the 
skin. The decomposed marrow of 
the nerves is crowded out at the ends 
of the nerves, as the decomposed mar¬ 
row of the bones is crowded to the 
surface of the marrow; the decom¬ 
posed medula of the nerves, with the 
additional electricity generated, is 
consolidated into teeth and nails of 
the fingers and toes. 

The eyes are like teeth with great 


% 


V 





17D. 


LA W, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREA PfOX. 


hollows in them. They are produced 
in the same way teeth are, and would 
be teeth if the optic nerve was as 
small as the nerves of the teeth. A 
portion of marrow dried up by being 
separated from the marrow of the 
bone is a chord or tendon. The grad¬ 
ual growth of the bone separated the 
marrow from a branch. A tendon is 
white and solid because a whole cell 
was contracted in its construction. 
A bone is different by a decomposi¬ 
tion of marrow before it was consoli¬ 
dated into bone. One end of a ten¬ 
don is always attached to a bone, the 
other is in a muscle. 

In this connection of a tendon with 
a muscle and bone and originally 

with a marrow, the marrow of a bone 
with a spinal column, the spinal col¬ 
umn with a brain, and a system of 
nerves with a brain, a continuation of 


V 






GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 171 . 

a plant’s form and branches is seen in 
the human body. 

A brain is the base of the plant; a 
spinal column is its trunk; a marrow 
of the other bones and the tendon 
once connected with them, are branch¬ 
es; and the bundle of cells and tissues 
in a muscle at the ends of the tendons 
are the bundles of foliage or spindles 
of the plant. 

This copying is by reason of the 
plant being the origin of the animal, 
and an animal the origin of a human 
being. It is a continuation of a plant 

that was converted into a creature. 

When the child is sufficiently de- 

•/ 

veloped, its increased current of elec¬ 
tricity discharged in the womb, will 
commence to push the child out. As 
it does so, the current will gradually 
escape through the walls of the womb 
and increase the strength of the 
mother. When the child is still, it 


172. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


will generate another current, and the 
operation is repeated. 

Every organ in the human or ani¬ 
mal body is a magnet capable of at¬ 
tracting and absorbing electricity. 
The discharge of it from any organ 
is by the pressure of such organ upon 
it or to make an equal amount in the 
other organ. For when any person 
or book talks about positive or nega¬ 
tive electricity they are only saying 
that one body has more than another. 
It takes the natural way to even up 
with the body having the less quantity, 
for the same reason that water will 
not run up hill but will run down hill. 

Electricity is capable of rapid mo¬ 
tion only when operating in a cir¬ 
cuitous route. Its operations in 
this circuitous course through our 
bodies performs every function of our 
organs or bodies, except what is 
. performed by the will. In fact, the 


GROWTH AND REP Am OF THE HJJMAN BODY. 173. 

mind is electric phenomena, the 
brain a set of most delicate, compli¬ 
cated and graded electric batteries, 
and man an electrical machine. 

All the electricity of the human or 
animal body is from the atmosphere 
and the decomposition of these cells 
of the plant and animal taken into 
the stomach. 

In receiving electricity from the 
atmosphere every person and animal 
is receiving the breath of life. The 
lungs deliver the electricity to the 
blood. Every inspiration bestows to 
the blood in the lungs the electricity 
necessary to expand the heart about 
four times. The attraction of the or¬ 
gans for the electricity draws the at- 

o 

mosphere into the lungs as a current 
from a fire or decomposing body caus¬ 
es the atmosphere to ascend over such 
decomposition. The gases follow 
where the current creates a vacuum. 



174. LA W, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OK CREATION. 

The atmosphere discharged is a 
mass of carbon in the form of gases 
called carbonic acid gas. They are 
rendered the same kind of atmosphere 
when electricity circulates in them 
again. 

The expansion of the lungs is caused 
by electricity entering into every in¬ 
terstice of these organs. It passes 
into the arteries that deliver the vein- 
ous blood to the heart, and carries 
this blood into the heart in the same 
way it carries the gases of the atmos¬ 
phere into the lungs. 

When the blood thus charged ar¬ 
rives at the heart, the current expands 
the auricles of the heart in the same 
way it expands the lungs, and when 
such parts of the hearts are expanded, 
the blood will fill the auricles as the 
atmosphere filled the lungs. 

The heart and its motions allow a 
focus of the currents of electricity that 


I 





GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 175. 

are obtained from the lungs, and 
these currents perform all the circula¬ 
tion of the blood that ever takes 
place. 

When the heart is expanded, the 
veinons blood flows into the auricles 
of the heart, from which it is carried 
to the entire limits of the organs of 
the body. In this operation of chang¬ 
ing from one auricle to the other, the 
blood receives the undecomposed sub¬ 
stance from the thoracic duct or con¬ 
veyance of fluids from the stomach. 

The influence of electricity upon the 
blood from this point is augmented 
by the generation of electricity, by 
the decomposition or combustion of 
the corpuscles or cells of the plant 
and animal substances taken into the 
system as food. The burning cells 
give the red color to the blood. 

When the heart is giving out the 
increased blood, a contraction will 






/ 


176. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CRE AT TON.. - 

take place of all the muscles around 
the auricles, because the electricity 
that expanded them has been attract¬ 
ed to all parts of the body. The puls¬ 
es create cells and tissues by shaking 
the protoplasm made by the burning 
cells into bubbles, as it condenses like 
steam from a tea kettle. The pulsa¬ 
tions of the blood are a tidal wave 
and produced by the same influence. 

The next, office of electricity in the 
blood after causing its circulation and 
the decomposition of the corpuscles 
in the blood, is to perform the growth 
of the organs and entire system. 

The substance of the growth of or¬ 
gans composed of muscle, what is 
commonly called flesh, is the same as 
the substance from which the solar 
system and every object in nature 
was constructed. 

The decomposition of the corpus¬ 
cles or food makes electricity, the 

•/ 7 




GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 177. 


sediment of such corpuscles, and the 
water of which the blood is mostly 
composed. The water and sediment 
are carried oft* by the kidneys and 
lodged in these organs on their return 
from the arteries and capillaries. 

A condition of carbon pressed into 
the blood by the electric currents gen¬ 
erated in the marrow of the bones is 
crowded by the blood to the surface, 
where it is piled up in tubes 
constituting hair. The different di¬ 
gestion of animals produces a mass 
of partly lifeless particles, instead of 
tubes which is made into hair, wool, 
feathers and the shell of the turtle, 
mollusk and other crusted animals. 

The heat of the blood is created by 
a decomposition of corpuscles, and 
the heat of the body is a consequence 
of this process of generating electric¬ 
ity. 

The strength of the body is the 

o * 


178. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


amount of electricity in it. With 

•/ 

what the nerves, brain and marrow 
in the bones add to that in the blood, 
there is in the body a power of such 
enormous extent as to give the or¬ 
ganization all the force and means of 
growth, and the force of every motion 
of the organs and entire bodv. 

No atom of substance in the uni¬ 
verse can move itself or cause other 
atoms of substance to move. No 
atom is moved bv any power of its 
own. Electricity is as helpless as 
atoms in its capacity of moving. The 
momentum of the operations of the 
atmosphere is the power which is al¬ 
ways assisting electricity in its own 
operations. This momentum is a 
continuation of the Almighty power 
that set the original mass to moving. 

The nerves inform the current of 
electricity in the blood what the great 
battery in the head commands. It is 




GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 179. 

accomplished by the nerves employ¬ 
ing the momentum of the current the 
brains generate, and sending to the or¬ 
gan to be moved or the object to be 
moved to. 

Every object generates and throws 
oft' electricity according to the rapid¬ 
ity of its decomposition. Part of the 
decomposed substance is converted 
into gases and a small amount re¬ 
turned to etectricitv. 

•/ 

Every influence thus created in, or 
on, the surface of the objects around 
us, will operate on the electric influ¬ 
ence of our bodies, and create a con¬ 
stant exchange of electricity between 
such objects and ourselves. The ex¬ 
change of these currents of electricity 
is all there is of what is called attrac¬ 
tion of gravitation, and of what is 
called love. 

The way the attraction is exerted 
is the opening a passage in the atmos- 


i 


180 . LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


phere, or the creation of a kind of 
vacuum in the gases of the atmos¬ 
phere, into which the two objects are 
pressed by the gases on the opposite 
sides of them. In case of lovers, the 
vacuum is generally filled with two 
human organizations, as they are 
powerful attractors of the electricity 
each generates. 

The aura of electricity around eve- 
ry object is extended to every object 
within a certain distance of the object 
that generates it. The brain is influ¬ 
enced by such aura from all objects 
around it. This eftect is the means 
of acquainting the brain of the exis¬ 
tence of objects not seen. It affords a 
causeway over which the brain can 
direct the current of electricitv of the 
body or an organ to go. 

The brain is able to discern the at¬ 
traction of Surrounding objects, and 
respond bv sending a current to them. 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 181 . 


When it is doing this a current from 
the blood is also sent and it propels 
the organs of locomotion. The use 
of the lees is thus controlled. The 

o 

reason one leg is moved at a time is 
because the atmosphere keeps us on 
the ground in the same way the gases 
push the metal to the magnet. 

Our inability to ascend the atmos- 

t 

phere is caused by our being pressed 
into a partial vacuum created by the 
earth’s magnetic current in the atmos¬ 
phere. One leg cannot be raised 
from the earth until the attraction of 
the earth is confined to the other leg. 
Before one foot can be raised the oth¬ 
er must possess the whole attraction 
of the earth upon the whole body. 
When this is accomplished the one 
that is deprived of the attraction is 
controlled by the attraction of the ob¬ 
jects to which we desire to move. 

The transfer of the attraction of the 


182. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

earth from one foot to the earth is 
accomplished by the will or brain 
sending a current, from the brain to 
the foot to be advanced sufficient to 
create an attraction around it. This 
controls the action of the foot until 
the other is operated on in the same 
way. 

The fly suspends itself on the ceil¬ 
ing by excluding the atmosphere from 
under its feet. It shifts its feet as fast 
as it is attracted to some point on the 
ceiling. Our walk on the earth is a 
similar operation. 

The motions of the other organs 
are caused the same as the manner of 
moving the legs. All the motions, 
except the involuntary motions, are 
the result of an attraction of the char¬ 
acter described. The brain is the or¬ 
gan that creates the paths for the or¬ 
gans to move through. 

The intestines, bladder, and organs 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 183. 


of digestion, organs of involuntary 
motions, are enabled to discharge 
the substances by the creation of gas¬ 
es generated by the decomposition of 
substances in them. They are emptied 
by the gases and electric currents gen¬ 
erated in this way. 

When sufficient of these gases and 
currents are generated, they will crowd 
open the orifices and force the con¬ 
tents out. The philosophy of the si¬ 
phon is operated in discharging the 
bladder. The intestines are cleared 
by a pushing of the gases genearted 
in the stomach. The chyle is thrown 
into the thoracic channel by the same 
force that crowds the other portion of 
the food into and out of the intestines. 
The chyle is much lighter than the 
substance that is forced into the in¬ 
testines and is for this reason carried 
into this channel and to the heart. 

The chords and sinews clear the 


184. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OFCREATION. 

muscles of their electricity when the 
organs in which the muscles exist are 
to be moved. This is accomplished 
bv the contraction of these sinews. 
The contraction is accomplished by 
the brain absorbing the electricity in 
the sinews. 

When the sinews are contracted the 
currents of electricity in the muscles 
and the blood in the veins of the or¬ 
gan to be moved are scpieezed out by 
this motion of the sinews. The sin¬ 
ews are always contracted when an 
organ is moved. 

They are a species of nerve, differ¬ 
ent from the common nerve in being 
single conductors of electricity. The 
nerves are usually several conductors 
united. When a sinew is contracted 
the electricity in it is attracted to the 
brain to assist the motion of the or¬ 
gans and body. 

The human family can avoid and 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 185. 


remove a countless variety of dis¬ 
eases if they can understand that this 
vicegerent of the Creator is the prin¬ 
cipal factor in all the operations of 
•digestion. 

The organs of digestion are to sep¬ 
arate the cells of the food taken into 
the stomach from the impure or part¬ 
ly decomposed cells, to push them in¬ 
to the thoracic channel and circula¬ 
tion, and to push the waste material 
into the intestines. The separation 
of these different substances is per¬ 
formed wholly by the influence of elec¬ 
tricity. 

The duodenum is attached to the 
stomach for the purpose of catching 
the waste currents of electricity gene¬ 
rated in the stomach. It is always 

t j 

prepared to charge the stomach with 
a current of electricity when a fresh 
supply of food is taken into the stom¬ 
ach. 


18 G. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

This commences the decomposition. 
This obtaining corpuscles for the 
blood, and throwing other substances 
off in another direction, is then con¬ 
tinued in the same way that electric- 
ity will separate the substances of any 
solution of metals and carry the dif- 

•j 

ferent substances to the objects that 
attract them. 

The cells are carried to the blood, 
and all other matter pushed out of 
the stomach. These cells when in the 
blood are usually called corpuscles. 
The tissues of the food, are also sepa¬ 
rated into cells. The electric current 
that is separating these cells and tis¬ 
sues, is obained through the pneumo- 
gastric nerve. It is obtained in pulsat¬ 
ing currents exactly as the blood 
obtains it. 

These currents are a part of the 
currents obtained from the atmos¬ 
phere through the lungs. The use of 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 187. 


them is to separate the carbon that is 
partly decomposed from the whole 
cells in the food. This is done by 
the current being discharged through 
the mass as often as it is stirred up 
by a pulsation of the walls of the 
stomach. 

This decomposes the partly decom¬ 
posed carbon more. It would decom¬ 
pose all the cells if they were not hol¬ 
low and lighter than the broken mas¬ 
ses, and therefore lifted into the tho¬ 
racic channel as fast as produced. 
The water in the stomach is carried 
along with the cells into this channel 

by the current of electricity. 

Any object is decomposed by 

electricity as the food is decom¬ 
posed. So is earth under the plant. 
It is the cells of the earth in the shape 
of atoms of oxygen and hydrogen 
that are decomposed by the currents 
of the earth and carried into the 
plant. 


188. LAW, OB PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

All the nutriment of the body is ob¬ 
tained from the globe we call the 
stomach and the soil in it, composed 
of food. Plants receive their nutri¬ 
ment from the globe. Each globe 
furnishes the power that lifts the nu¬ 
triment into the circulation of the 
body connected with it. This elec¬ 
tric power also lifts the chick from 
the shell and the child from the womb 
to perambulate earth on two legs. 

The plant obtains all its electricity 
from the earth. Man and animals ob¬ 
tain all theirs from the atmosphere 
and the batteries in their bodies. 

The nerves are filled with a sub¬ 
stance similar to the marrow in the 
bones. Sometimes several nerves are 
supposed to be one. A current of 
electricity obtained from the brain, as 
the electricity in the sinews is, cours¬ 
es through these nerves, and decom¬ 
poses the substance in them, to some 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 189. 


extent, as electricity does the marrow 
in the bones. 

The decomposed marrow of the 
nerves is crowded out at the ends of 
the nerves, as the decomposed marrow 
of the bones is crowded to the surface 
of the marrow. This decomposed 
marrow of the nerves and the elec¬ 
tricity generated by the decomposi¬ 
tion causes the production of teeth 
and nails. The teeth are of the same 
substance the bones are. The enam¬ 
el is carbon more condensed. The 
decomposition is produced, as dia¬ 
monds are produced, by the influence 
of water and air. Air will condense 
everything it touches. It will absorb 
all the etectricity it can find. 

The water fills the interstices of the 
tooth as fast as it is absorbed. The 
constant passage of the current 
through the tooth gradually fills up 
everv channel in its surface. The 


190. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


outer surface of the tooth becomes a 
condition of carbon, similar to the 
diamond. The shape of the tooth 
corresponds to the amount of carbon 
the nerve or nerves in it can dis¬ 
charge. 

A tooth is a heap of carbon around 
the end of a nerve or several nerves 
that discharge it. The mass of un¬ 
consolidated carbon that the nerves 
discharge in the tooth, is like the vit¬ 
reous humor of the eye. It is the 
electricity in the tooth that causes 
the pain when the enamel is broken. 
Teeth are set in sockets the shape of 
those the eyes occupy. 

Children get a new set when these 
sockets are so swollen by the rapid 
growth of their gums and jaw bones, 
that their teeth become loose. If it 
was not necessary to use broken 
teeth, in a few months or years, they 
would be repaired, as any injury to 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 191. 

the body is repaired. A few instan¬ 
ces of this character are recorded. 

The reason for our skulls being so 
uneven on their surfaces will discover 
all there is in the science of phren¬ 
ology. 

The difference in the thickness of 
the skull is due to the greater amount 
of decomposition of the marrow under 
points thicker than the rest. It is a 
greater heap of decomposed marrow, 
produced by the greater, activity of 

such organs under these thicker por¬ 
tions of the skull. Their activity de- 
composes their substance faster than 
the substance of the others, are de¬ 
composed. The cause of this activity 
will be stated further on. 

In our fingers and toes there is a 
termination of several nerves. At 
the end of each there is a pile of car¬ 
bon, called nails. The shape corres¬ 
ponds to the construction of the 


192. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

nerves at the base. < • | 

The more harmless character of 
human nails, than those of the cat or 
bear, is because the several termina¬ 
tions of nerves are such, that they do 
not construct these nails so as to 
unite all the substance the nerves dis¬ 
charge. No nails grow where the 
nerves in the arms or legs are severed. 
A person who has a finger cut off*, 
gets no more than a hooked construc¬ 
tion, at the point where the finger is 
cut. There is no growth of nails, if 
the limb is paralyzed, before a growth 
of the nails is produced. 

The use of a hole through an eye 
is of much importance. The optic 
nerve is so large, that its magnetic 
current can blow a clearing for itself 
through these organs. The outer 
portion is the same as the tooth. The 
color and substance is the same. It 
is a little less condensed. The press- 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 193. 


ure Of the gums on the teeth make 
them harder than the whites of the 
eyes. The carbon from the marrow 
of the nerves, thrown into the ball of 
the eye, that is unemployed, is pressed 
out of the ball, by the current dis¬ 
charged by the nerve, and conducted 
to the nostrils by the eyelids and a 
channel like that which drains our 
cities. The nose is operated to get 
rid of it. If the work is neglected the 
breathing is interfered with. 

The eye is a round shell of decom- 
posed corpuscles of the optic nerve. 
It is attached to the optic nerve, as 
the tooth is attached to the nerve un¬ 
der it. The outer surface of the eye 
ball is attached to the muscles of the 
face about the eves. 

In the carbon discharged by the 
nerves of the eye, there is always a 
small quantity of metallic substance, 
as in all kinds of substances. The 




' / 




194. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

current of electricity discharged by 
the nerve, decomposes this metallic 
substance, to some extent, as a fuse 
ignites metal. 

The illumination thus created lights 
up the partition between the aqueous 
and vitreous humors. When the per¬ 
son is willing to observe all the crea- 

c5 

tions of nature, and is content with an 
honest life, this lattice work is an 
agreeable color and quite light. If 
the person is unwilling to let the 
world see what is in his thoughts it 
will be dark or of a disagreeable as¬ 
pect. He resorts to the capacities of 
his brain in studying dishonesty, and 
neglects the use of the optic nerve. 
The nerves then contract as they al- 
ways do when not used. 

The organs of the brain besides giv¬ 
ing us what intelligence we have, give 
the mind a means of ascending as 
high as it desires, though the body is 



GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 195. 


confined to the earth. If we could 
see the atmosphere as the waters of 
the earth are seen, it would be dis¬ 
covered that we are inhabitants of a 
fluid so much like water, that the dif¬ 
ference is only in the density of the 
two bodies and amount of electricity 

t/ 

in them. 

The improvement of the character 
of the water and atmosphere is the 
cause of the disappearance of the ani¬ 
mals that are now out of existence, 
the decrease of those now existing 
and the improvement of the human 
mind. 

We are connected by the atmos- 

«/ 

phere and the electricity in it, with all 
the other creations that exist in it. 
Every one of our neighbors of this 
sphere of existence is allied to us in 
some degree of intimacy. In this re¬ 
lation to the objects around us, and 
such as can operate on our organiza- 


196. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

tions, there is a chance to discover 
what our minds are, and what creates 
them. 

Sight is the magnetic currents, the 
optic nerves discharge, coming in con¬ 
tact with the currents of electricity, 
discharged by the objects capable of 
discharging it sufficiently to be felt 
by the optic nerves When the object 
before us is not of this character, we 
cannot see it. 

Eyes are only conductors of the 
currents of electricitv from the brain 

ml 

to the surface of the cornea or eye ball. 
The sense of sight is only a sense of 
feeling, so accurate as to give us an 
understanding of all the features of a 
thing thus felt. 

In our eyes, pictures of the objects 
in front of us are stamped on the 
magnetic current of the optic nerves, 
as any photograph is taken. The 
currents such objects throw out, will 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 197. 


affect the substance of the eves, as a 

%j 7 

person sitting for a photograph affects 
the decomposing chemicals on the 
plate in a camera. Every current op¬ 
erates on each part of the substance. 
On the vitreous humor of the eyes 
this operation stamps a picture of it¬ 
self. The operation is telegraphed to 
the brain and the stamping is there 
repeated. 

The motion of the operation of 
photographing a picture or the char¬ 
acter of an object on the vitreous hu¬ 
mor of the eyes, is extended to the 
brain through the magnetic currents 
of the optic nerves, and these motions 
produce a picture of the same form 
on the magnetic aura of the brain. 

The reason for the incorporation of 
the form and features of a person on 
a plate of tin, covered with a rapidly 
decomposing amount of chemicals, is 
the why a decomposing brain can be 


198. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


impressed with the features of an ob¬ 
ject of sight. The decomposing 
chemicals discharge a current of 
electricity. 

Any object discharging a current 
that is reaching such decomposing 
chemicals, will offer a resistance to 
the discharge of such current from 
the chemicals. The effect will pro-* 
duce on the substance of the chemi¬ 
cals a difference in the decomposition 

and condition of the substance. 
Photographs are copies of the condi¬ 
tion of such chemicals after the influ¬ 
ence of the person or object photo¬ 
graphed is exerted on them. 

The theory of sight generally ac¬ 
cepted is: that an object seen pro¬ 
duces a picture of itself in the eye, 
like a picture in a looking glass, upon 
the interior fluid of the eyes, and that 
this picture is the thing the brain 
sees. We do not see our pictures in 


I 




\ 




GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 199. 

a mirror. The picture that appears 
to be in a mirror is a chemical opera¬ 
tion in our eyes. It is after our mag¬ 
netic currents are returned to our 
eyes that the appearance of the pic¬ 
ture occurs. 

In all substances incapable of ap¬ 
propriating the currents of our bodies, 
pictures of ourselves can apparently 
be seen. When, our magnetic in¬ 
fluence is absorbed by a body, no 
such phenomenon can occur. The 
currents of the objects that appear to 
be in the mirror are reflected. Every 
thing thus reflected will be seen as 

i 

though in the glass. 

If it is a picture of an object in the 
eye, as is claimed, that gives the sight 
of an object, how does the brain get a 
sight of it ? This will be as difficult 
as to discover why an object is not at 
once seen by the brain as well as an 
object in the eye produced by the ex- 


200. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF ORE ATTON. 


ternal object. 

The currents of the optic nerve cre¬ 
ate the same phenomenon upon the 
magnetic currents the object seen 
creates upon the current of the optic 
nerve discharged at the cornea of the 
eye. 

In a time to come the same meth¬ 
od may be devised for the transmis¬ 
sion of scenerv and motion. It will 
be a copying of the organs of sight. 

Telegraphing is a copy of the brain 
and nervous system. The telephone 
is a copy of the mechanism of the ear. 
A camera obscura is a copy of a ven¬ 
tricle in the brain and the eye. The 
phonograph is a copy of the capacity 
of appreciating music, a fold of the 
brain and a chamber of the brain con¬ 
taining a kind of vitreous humor. 

The auditory nerves are only allowed 
to carry to the brain such intensity of 
vibrating motion or sound as is of use 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 201. 


to us. If all motions of the atmosphere 
were allowed to give the brain a con¬ 
sciousness of their operations, as they 
would if not excluded, the world would 
seem a carnival of noise in which no 
particular motion of the atmosphere 
could be distinguished. 

The only capacity of the atmos¬ 
phere to produce sound, is to cause 
the magnetic currents of the auditory 
nerves to vibrate to the extent that 
the construction of the ears will per¬ 
mit. This vibratory motion of the 
current is extended to the brain, the 
only possible way to create the sen¬ 
sation of sound. The motion is so 
modified before it reaches the nerve, 
that it can be transmitted without do¬ 
ing harm to the brain. This modifi¬ 
cation is the exclusion of useless 
noises. 

The fluid in the eyes destroys any 
motion of the currents of the optic 


202. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

nerve of a character to produce sound. 

The optic nerve can convey sound 

to some extent if the eyeballs are de- 

•/ 

stroyed. In some instances the mo- 
tions of the atmosphere giving the 
sensation of sound produce colors or 
light in the eyes. Two cases are re¬ 
corded created by the notes of a 
piano. 

A nerve in the body can assist us 
to move while it is giving the sensa¬ 
tion of heat and feeling. The sense 
of smell is made by electricity. It is 
a sense of feeling. 

The nerves in the mouth, tongue 
and nose discharge a current from 
their extremities, as all nerves do. 
In these organs these currents are af¬ 
fected by the magnetic influence gen¬ 
erated by the substances that come 
in contact with them. It is the elec¬ 
tricity an object exerts that gives the 
sensation of taste or smell. In any 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 203. 

other way such objects can produce 
mechanical effects only. The decom¬ 
position of the substance in contact 
with the organ generates the electric¬ 
ity that makes the taste or smell. 

The difference in the sensations of 
taste and smell is in the extent of the 
effect of the substance such nerves 
experience. The nerves of the tongue 
are more active than the nerves in 
the nose, therefore greater sensation. 

Taste and smell are different effects 
from mechanical effects. The me¬ 
chanical and magnetic effects can be 
perceived at the same time. 

In like effects all chemical phenom¬ 
ena can be observed. In taste and 
smell there are only two effects pro¬ 
duced by the substance tasted or 
smelt. The mechanical effect is not 
a part of the taste or smell. These 
effects are the absorption of the elec¬ 
tricity discharged by the organs of 


204. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


taste or smell by the thing tasted or 
smelt, or an impartation of electric¬ 
ity to such organs by the substance. 
It is always one or the other except 
when the substances are incapable of 
sufficient decomposition to produce 
an effect as g:old and some other ob- 

(_J 

jects. In these operations all the 
pleasures and displeasures of taste 
and smell are obtained. 

In the stomach a similar philosophy 
is operated in the influences the sub¬ 
stances taken into the stomach are 
exerting. The food imparts to the 
body through digestion and the 
branches of the pneumogastric nerve 
all its electricity. Substances absorb¬ 
ing this electricity from the body and 
digestive organs are sure to give vio¬ 
lent work in the stomach and the oth¬ 
er organs of the body. Substances 
attracting the electricity of the body, 
when taken into the stomach, mouth 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 205. 

or nose, are usually called narcotics. 

The narcotic effects are the absorb- 
tion of these life producing currents. 
The effects of tobacco smoke and oth¬ 
er substances taken into the stomach 
show this. The carbon of the smoke 
instantly absorbs the electricity thrown 
out by the tongue and mouth, which 
weakens the brain. The increase of 
the saliva of the mouth is caused by 
the more rapid discharge of the elec¬ 
tricity of the tongue and mouth. 

The stomach is made to discharge 
the gastric juices of its secretions in 
the same way. The food taken into 
the stomach or mouth attracts the 
electricity from the nerves that termi- 

c/ 

nate in these organs, and in its dis¬ 
charge from the walls of the stomach 

CD 

and the surface of the mouth and 
tongue these juices are released. The 
brain is affected as in the use of tobac¬ 
co by smoking. 

4/ C_j 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


200. 


To eat a hearty meal causes sleep¬ 
iness. This effect is not injurious. 

The influences absorbed bv the food 

•/ 

soon pass to the blood and over the 

entire bodv. In the use of tobacco 

it is all lost to the system. 

The only effects of a medicine is 

either to increase or decrease the 

electricity of the body. The uses ot 

medicine-, except in a few cases where 

mechanical effects are wanted, are 

solely to increase or diminish the 
* 

agent of life in the body. 

Every injury or benefit to the sys¬ 
tem by the use of medicine is pro¬ 
duced by increasing or diminishing 
electricity in the body generally or in 

•/ « ; dy »/ 

some organ of the body. 

H 


Too great an increase or 



•ease 


of electricity will produce death. 
Death by lightning is the effect of a 
great current discharged into the sys¬ 
tem instantly. It prevents all the 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 207. 


operations of the currents of the body, 

and destroys a paid of the organiza¬ 
tion. 

Any surrounding body that absorbs 
the electricity of the system will de- 
stroy the organization in time. 

Every fever is a result of the con- 

i * 

traction of the channels for the dis¬ 
charge of electricity from the body or 
organs. 

The additional heat of the body is 
the result of a greater combustion of 
the cells of the blood. This always 

t J 

follows when the electricity cannot be 
discharged from the body as fast as 

it is created. The blood will be de- 

* 

pleted of its cells, and when the great 
heat at the surface is gone, this deple¬ 
tion will be as apparent as a batch of 
white paint on a black wall. 

The greater flush of the cheek or 
skin, ilia fever, is the burning of the 
tissues by the increased current of 
electricity. 


208. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

The greater combustion of the body 
and its organs in cases of fever is con¬ 
fined to their surfaces. The organs 
of digestion and circulation are con¬ 
stantly pressing the currents of the 
organs and body to the surface, and 
the combustion takes place where the 
force is crowded against the outer 
portions of the organs and body. If 
the tissues of the blood vessels, nerves, 
heart and other vital organs were 
burned to the extent that the tissues 
in the skin and exterior of the body 
are, death would be quickly produced. 

Death will not occur from fever if 
the strength of the body can be main¬ 
tained until the accumulated electrici¬ 
ty forces its way out. It will force 
itself out if the organs of digestion 
will furnish the substance for creating 
this electricity in the blood, till its 
force is sufficient to create an escape 
for itself. 




GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 209. 

The lungs alone cannot increase 
electricity in the body. If the diges¬ 
tion of food is stopped the body will 
be destroyed by a creation of com¬ 
bustion of the vital organs. The cur¬ 
rents in this condition of the body will 

t/ 

apply their work to the vital organs 

and destroy them. In every death 

by fear, more or less decomposition 

of the vital organs is discovered. 

It is possible to alleviate or remove 

all diseases by fever. The best means 

is to get the pores of the system open. 

This can be done in time, and in just 

the same way that the forces of na- 

•/ 

ture opens the pores of the earth, 
which allow the escape of electricity 
from the around. In case of the 

o 

earth it is accomplished by decompos¬ 
ing a portion of the water on its sur¬ 
face, and bv the same means vibrating 
the water in the atmosphere and the 
atmosphere, too, producing what is 



210. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


called heat. This vibratory motion 
of these surrounding substances will 
always open the pores of the earth. 
It is seen in the spring of the year. 

A similar process is sure to relieve 
a fever. The warm vapor can be ob¬ 
tained from the tea kettle. A cloth 
saturated with hot water will carry it 

%J 

to the body. A vapor bath will bring 
the same result. A perspiration 
should be obtained. In a few hours 
the fever will be gone. Alcohol rub¬ 
bed over the body will open the pores. 
Alchohol applied to any ache, burn 
soreness or boil will generally allevi¬ 
ate and cure. 

The work of repairing the system is 
a continuation of the process of 
growth. It is all that is necessary to 
crowd off the destroyed tissues and 
put new ones in their places. 

When a wound is inflicted on the 
body the dead tissues are partly de- 


GROWTH AND.REPAIR OP THE HUMAN BODY. 211. 


composed and very rapidly. The 
wasted portions are allowed to settle 
over the iujury. This accumulation 
of partly decomposed tissues protects 
the wound from the decomposing ef¬ 
fects of the atmosphere by excluding 
the atmosphere from the wound. 

The growth will supply new tissues 
when protection is afforded. The 
pressure of the scab is all that is nec¬ 
essary to cause a cessation of growth. 
In most instances where there are no 
such protectors of the wound, the 
growth will continue and look like 
goiters or tumors, called proudffesh, 
which are stopped by a skin created 
by substances in the blood. The 
same operation takes place in the 
bones where they are injured, except 
that the skin or membrane around 
the bone checks an illegitimate pro¬ 
duction of bone. In such cases a free 
application of alcohol will clean out 




212. LA W, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


the proudflesh and produce a scab. 
In all such cases the temporary pain or 
smart will be more than compensated, 
by the good feeling immdiately after. 
The alcohol can be weakened to suit 
the timidity of the patient. 

The sense of feeling is in no sense 
different from any of the other senses, 
except that it is an effect of differ¬ 
ently disturbing the electricity in the 

,y CT J 

body. In each sense there is only an 
interference with the magnetic influ¬ 
ence of one or more nerves. 

In the eyes it is a resistance to the 
discharge of electricity from the op¬ 
tic nerves by the electricity thrown 
out by the objects seen. 

In the ears it is a vibration of the 
influences around the drum of the ear 
and in the auditory nerves. 

t J 

These motions of the current are 
produced bv the vibrations of the at¬ 
mosphere. 


/ 


- 

GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 213. 

f 

In the nose it is the conflict of the 
magnetic influences discharged by 
the nerves of the nose with such cur- 
rents as are discharged by the sub¬ 
stances that give the sensation of 
smell. 

In the mouth and on the tongue it 
is a conflict of the same character be¬ 
tween the electrical influences of such 

organs and those of the substances 

. 

tasted. 

The sense called feeling or touch is 
a conflict of the magnetic currents of 
the body, or organs of the body, with 
any solid body or other substance 
brought in contact with the body or 
organs. 

! The philosophy of all the senses is 

the same. It is the same agent in 
each case that carries a message to 
the brain. In each case it is a sense 
of feeling only. The commonly dis¬ 
closed operations of our nerves are a 





214. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

small part of the senses. 

The sense of love is as clearly an 

•/ 

electrical phenomenon as any of the 
so called senses. The perceptions of 
ideas, the impressions called thoughts, 
are as distinct sensations, or capaci¬ 
ties for sensations, as any of the origi¬ 
nal five. 

The nerves of volition and those 
without sensation produce sensations 
in the brain distinct from the five. 

The intelligence of every being, an¬ 
imal or human, is proportioned to the 
capacity of their brain for sense or 
sensation. The nerves of volition and 
involition are the instruments for the 
transmission of sensation to the aura 
of the brain. The one great office of 
the brain is to create a graded and 
separate number of sensative magnets, 
upon which all the capacities of a hu¬ 
man mind can be operated. In all 
these folds of medula that constitute 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 215. 


the human brain is to be found the 
complication of electric batteries that 
are producing every manifestion of 
intelligence that a human mind can 
manifest. The intellect or mind is 
the electrical phenomena of all of 
these magnets. 

In the heads of all animals of intel¬ 
ligence there is only the blood, bones 
and marrow. When the electric cur¬ 
rents from a single artery or blood 
vessel in the brain is taken away from 


any part of the brain, or if the flow 
of blood in such blood vessel is 
checked, the intelligence will be di¬ 
minished proportionally and the in¬ 
telligence will return when the blood 
is allowed to flow through these ves¬ 


sels again. 

A dog and bird have been subjects 
of experiments for establishing this 
fact bv numerous investigations. In 
a series of experiments in the human 


216. LA W, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


and animal organization it has been 
found that the mind or intellect de¬ 
pends on some influence the blood 
imparts to the brain. 

Experiments of the effects of elec¬ 
tricity on the brain of living and dead 
bodies of persons and animals have 
been made. Every appearance of 
life and consciousness is produced in 
the dead organization by the trans¬ 
mission of a current of electricity 
through it. Attempts at motion or 
expression of thought or motion have 

been seen in the features of this part- 

lv resurrected life. 

• ' _ 

If electricity can restore apparent 
life and consciousness to the dead, if 
its withdrawal from the organization 
of the living will destroy life, con¬ 
sciousness and intelligence propor¬ 
tionate to its withdrawal, it can not 
be doubted, that in its operations in 

the brain, is the entire philosophy or 
cause of mind. 


. 

Hr' 

GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 217. 

No intelligence is created by any 
other element. It is known that eve- 
ry production of thought or intelli- 
gence requires a certain amount of de¬ 
composition of the marrow of the brain, 
that what is destroyed must be replaced 

before any further manifestation of 

•/ 

mind can be made, or before the brain 
will evolve any considerable manifesta¬ 
tions of intelligence. 

The decomposition of the marrow 

or medula of the brain generates ad¬ 
ditional electricity. The mind or in¬ 
telligence depends upon the existence 
of this vicegerent of the Creator in 

the brains of men and animals. 

In our organizations all that is nec- 

cessary to give us life and mind ex¬ 
ists. In man alone the capacity of 
mind can be augmented. If mind 
was not a part of his organization his 
intelligence could not be increased. 
Man could not add to a fiat creation 
of the Almighty. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS' OF CREATION'. 


218 . 

Mind is a description of objects 
stamped upon the magnetic influence 
of the brain. There is an unwilling¬ 
ness to accept a plain and simple 
solution of the mind. Do not be 
afraid to understand that man is a 
galvanic batterv and his mind elec- 

’O >' 

trie phenomena. 

The difference between any species 
of animals, in respect to their intelli¬ 
gence, and the difference between any 
animal and man in this respect, is in 
the amount of electricity upon their 
shoulders, or in their heads, on which 
the influences of all the objects of 
creation can make impressions. 

The most interesting and astonish¬ 
ing construction of organs in the sys¬ 
tem of a person or an animal is the 
complication of galvanic batteries 
that constitute the brain. Nowhere 
in the operations of the universe can 
so wonderful and ingenious a plan of 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 219. 


producing effects be discovered. 

The whole phenomena of the hu¬ 
man intellect is not more composed 
of wonders than are the means of pro¬ 
ducing such phenomena. In the 
means for producing thought, and es¬ 
tablishing a record of all that is im¬ 
pressed on the current of the brain, 
there is all that will ever be discover¬ 
ed of intelligence. 

No person can construct so perfect 
a means for creating intelligence. 
The means can be understood, never¬ 
theless. 

The evidence of the truth of what 
will be stated is to be found in the 
explanation. 

The creation of the brain is in no 
sense different from the method of 
creating the marrow of the bones, or 
the cells of the same character in the 
nerves. 

It is seen that a special faculty is 


220. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 

given each fold of medula in the 
brain. The extent and activity of 
each of these folds in the method 
adopted for decomposing them and 
producing an electric current, is the 
measure of the intelligence they can 
exhibit. It is rational to suppose 
that in the current of electricity crea¬ 
ted by their decomposition, the means 
of causing an intellectual manifesta¬ 
tion is to be found, as well as the 
measure of the manifestation. It is a 
fact that this influence is the sensitive 
plate on which are photographed the 
views of objects that are the subjects 
of thought. 

In these sensitive plates there is 
the whole philosophy for the possible 
impressions, and these fields of elec¬ 
tricity are the subjects and means of 
consciousness or mind. There is no 
better plate upon which the objects of 
creation can impress themselves. 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 221. 


There is no better way to allow a 
creature to observe an object, its form, 


character, and use, than to give, him 
this most refined and sensitive in¬ 
fluence ever created. 

There is no better wav for allowing; 


a record of all possible impressions of 
such a nature than by stamping them 
on a substance that will give an im¬ 
pression, or a complete construction 
of the same character, on a condens¬ 
ing influence, that can ever exhibit 
them again, and whenever they are 


wanted. 

Of such an arrangement is the one 
in our heads. In its operations are 
to be found our means of thinking, 
and the recording all we think. In 
the ventricles of the brain the im¬ 
pressions of all that we behold or dis¬ 
cover by any of such thoughts and 

»7 *j O' 

images of all objects of our experience 
will be found whenever our brains are 


222. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


sufficiently excited. All of those who 
have been at the point of death, and 


in fear of its realizations, and those 
who have been excited bv great dan- 
ger or other ca uses of great emotions, 
will remember that in such moments 
a panorama of all their experience 
passed like the flash of lightning be¬ 
fore their mental visions. It was a 
peep into the gallery of pictures 
which were created to afford memory 

t J 

on earth and intelligence and memo¬ 
ry in the life to come. 


A gallery of this character is in the 
brain of every person. It is the 
source of their memory and the data 


of such things as they desire to recall. 

They are the archives of the charac- 
• • 

ter and conduct of the individual. 
They are so well kept that every per¬ 
son is compelled to behold them in 
the future life. 


This gallery is the bible chronology 

ij J o»/ 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 223. 


and record bv the Creator of' his 

#./■ 

children. In this important and most 
interesting disclosure we have the 
best possible evidence of the existence 
of a human soul. In the employment 
of our faculty of memory we resort to 


the gallery of stamps on a part of the 
creation of the soul itself. 

Our minds are impressions upon 
the magnetic currents of the brain. 

O 

And we are indebted to our own souls 


for all we remember. The record is 
kept for this character of employ¬ 
ment, and a better employment in 
the life to come. The truth of these 
statements will be realized when they 

9 

have been fully considered. 

It is certain that man has a record 
of all his acts kept without his voli¬ 
tion and beyond his control. In its 
production, in a future existence, 

whatever character that existence may 

*/ 

be, will be discerned the grounds of 


224. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 




the judgment passed upon him. In 
this judgment will he found a perfect 
adaptation of rewards .and punish¬ 
ments. 


The construction of this gallery is 
in a great measure like the construction 
of the vegetable forms in the frost on 
the window pane, and on the crystals 
of the chemist’s operations. The pic¬ 


tures of the 


latter character are 



more important and wonderful than 
has ever been supposed. 

A thought can be created and a 
copy of it be impressed on the con¬ 
densing electricity of the brain. The 
impression of an object, or objects, on 
the magnetic influence of the brain, is 
in all respects the same as that wit¬ 
nessed in the act of photographing. 
The influence the object exerts influ¬ 
ences this aura around the brain. 

The disturbance of this influence will 
produce a s] >ecies of photograping on it. 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 225. 


The photograph will be stamped on the 
interior or ventricle of the brain, as 
the effect of the influence of an object 


on the electro field of the chemicals 
on the plate in the camera will be 
communicated to, and stamped on, 
the decomposing acids and chemicals 
on the plate. 

We can discover such pictures as 
are copied on the interior chambers 
of our brain, when they are lighted 
up by an increase of the current of 
the brain, as in moments of great ex¬ 
citement or emotions. When thev 
are thus lighted up, the illumination 
will perform the same office of light¬ 
ing, and in the same way the mem¬ 
branes of the eye are lighted when 
the optic nerve is excited. 

In each of our minds is an electro¬ 


typing as well. The will can stamp 
any impression of the mind upon the 
mind of other persons. It is accom- 


226. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION 

plished by giving them a peep into 
the gallery of our own construction. 
This will take place when any one is 
in rapport or close magnetic relation 
with us. His magnetic currents will 
extend to this gallery and steal a 
sight of its pictures. 

You will often observe what is in 
the mind of another when no express¬ 
ion of the idea is made. You can 
realize the thoughts of another in 
this way frequently. It could not be 
obtained, if it was not a real picture 
of the idea observed, by the mind of 
the other person observing it. 

In each operation of this character 
the influence of the brain extends to 
that of another. The union of such 
influences gives power to one person 
to understand the mind of another. 
Every species of magnetizing or 
mind reading is of this character. 

We obtain a glimpse of the thing 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 227. 


we desire to remember, by exciting 

our brains by effort of the nerves and 

1 / 

muscles to such an extent, as to cause 
an electric current of the brain to be 
created, extensive enough, to extend 
to the interior of this gallery. When 
it is thus extended we behold the data 


we are looking for. The wisest of 
men can only create greater galleries 
of such paintings in their heads; The 
sizes of these galleries are the meas- 
ures of their wisdom. 

The wav we imagine a thing to 

exist is bv a consideration of some 

t 

object, or set of objects suggested to 

our consciousness. When it is con¬ 
sidered we only construct a thing or 
set of things like the objects already 
impressed on the brain. It is a call¬ 
ing up of objects already familiar to 
us. In every instance the thing im- 
agined will consist of one or more of 
the objects stamped on these galler¬ 


ies. 


228. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


We never imagine the sight of an 
object not composed of one or more 
objects we have seen. Attempt to 
picture'a thing in the mind not com¬ 
posed of pictures of objects yon have 
seen. 

No power of copying would exist 
if a picture of the work was not 
stamped on the brain in a wav to ob¬ 
serve it when copying. 

The ability to design an object 
is the capacity of arranging a number 
of objects already in the mind into a 
new combination, and giving the 
brain a picture of this new creation. 
No. part of the invention can be any 
thing except what is already in the 
mind. 

When we are sleeping the pictures 
of the gallery in the head are partly 
illuminated. The result is the ramb¬ 
ling construction of ideas, or the ob¬ 
jects of which the ideas were created. 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 229. 


The glimpse of these pictures is ob¬ 
tained by reason of the increased cur- 
rents of the brain during sleep. These 
currents are sometimes increased by 
spirit influence. The pictures and 
thoghts in the spirit’s mind are implant¬ 
ed upon the mind of the sleeper. 

The repose of all the organs causes 
an accumulation of electricity around 
the brain, which operates as the cur¬ 
rents do, that are generated by fear 
or great excitement. In our dreams 
it sometimes brings us pictures of 
things we have never seen. It is 

cu 

when we are connected with the cur 
• 

rents of the objects seen at such times. 
Sometimes we are thus connected 
with distant friends. Their influence 
if united with ours will be very likely 
to give us a picture of such persons. 

A complete understanding of all 
these subtle operations of nature will 
cause extreme care and anxiety in 


280. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF C RE ATTON. 

regard to the kind of pictures we. al¬ 
low to be hung in these immortal gal¬ 
leries of the brain. The punishment 
following the consciousness of a life of 
selfishness and vice will be as endur¬ 
ing as the pictures of such work, ev¬ 
ery one of which will endure until erad- 
icated by the creation of a more care- 

%J 

fully prepared gallery of paintings. 

By an examination we can under- 

%J 

stand why these different batteries of 
the brain generate different ideas. A 
pattern of ideas was applied to each 
of these folds ofmedula and a thought 
cast for each one corresponding to 
the pattern. 

A twig of a tree will illustrate this 
division of our faculties. The brain 
is a copy of a twig in a better state 
of existence. The cerebellum is in¬ 
forming us of the plant origin of the 
animal that was our origin. A per¬ 
fect twig of the old spruce is seen in 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 231. 


the base of the brain. It fittingly 
tops out the spinal column. In the 
folds or leaves of the brain, the forms 
of the leaves or branches of this plant 
can be seen. 


W e are the dust of the earth, bolted 
through the plant and animal crea¬ 
tions. Each bough is seen as dis¬ 
tinctly as though the twig was actual¬ 
ly there. In each bough a current of 
electricity is circulating. It is dis- 
charged on its surface. On this cur- 
rent is a picture of the decomposing 
medula under it. When a greater 
object than this coil of medula is im¬ 
pressing this current, this creation of 
decomposing medula will operate to 
cause the electricity to copy a part of 
the leaf that is decomposing on the 
picture of the object that is intluenc- 
ing the current. 

In this operation all the means is 
acquired of giving each organ a par- 


2S-2. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OFCREATION. 

ticular office of thinking, or thought 
making. Each leaf is a particular 
shape. Each is different in some de¬ 
gree from the others, particularly in 
their capacity for decomposition. 
The difference in their offices corres¬ 
ponds to the difference in their con¬ 
struction and means of generating a 

o o 

current of electricity. All are the in- 

•/ 

struments of the electricity that cir- 

#/ 

dilates through them. They are de- 

- . 

composed and rebuilt in a short time. 

()n the electricity obtained by their 
decomposition, a chance is afforded 
to impress each current with what the 
circulation of the blood can impress 
them with. Every species of food we 
eat can stamp its electricity on the 
brain. In this means of imparting to 
the brain the character of the sub¬ 
stance we eat is the cause of the dif¬ 
ference in the lucidity of thoughts the 
brain evolves. 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 233. 


Amitiveness is the first repository 
of the electricity animal food creates. 
This electricity is the most active 
part of the blood current. The organ 
is excited by this charge from the 
blood. The excitement produces the 
sensations of such character as this 
organ can acquire. The locality of 
the organ affords the current a chance 
to excite it before the others are so 
greatly excited. The nerves of the 
body carry the activity of this organ 
to the other parts of the system. 

Alimentiveness is affected in the 
same way. It is the absence of such 
a kind of excitement that produces a 
desire for animal or exciting food. 
The nerves connect it with the organs 
of digestion and the glands of the 
mouth. 

Combativeness is a capacity for ex¬ 
citing the whole muscular system. 
The excitement is produced bv the 



LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


284. 

way the objects around us resist the 
desire to execute our wills. When 
the operations, of the mind are thwart¬ 
ed by a resistance to muscular action 
by a person or object, the nerves of 
the muscles create a greater excite¬ 
ment of this fold of the brain. The 
electricity of the organ when excited 
is exerted by the increase of the cur- 
rents that give our muscles activity. 
The additional force thus obtained 
enables, if it is possible, the execution 
of the will. 

Affirmativeness situated on the pin¬ 
nacle of the head, is a conduit medi¬ 
um, for a constant coursing of the in¬ 
fluence of the blood through the head, 
and is, therefore, always active to 
some extent. Its influence on the 
organs of the whole system is the 
keeping up of a constant irritation of 
all of them, and a constant pushing 
of all of their operations. This con- 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 235. 


stant pushing will continue the work 

of the individual whatever it may he. 

• • 

It is of the greatest importance to the 
success of any person that this mo¬ 
tor be allowed to push in the proper 
direction. 

Veneration is the best organ in the 
head for us to consult. It lights up 
the gallery of photographs in the cen¬ 
ter of the brain. It is located direct- 
lv over this gallery. The electricity 
of this organ is solely to keep watch 
over the records of our acts and cause 
us to reflect on their character. In 
this constant way of reminding us of 
the bad character of the pictures in 
this gallery, the reason is found for a 
person’s constant reflection on the 
future life and the goodness of the 
Creator. It is like the child that 
keeps one eve on its capers and one 
on the frowns and smiles of its parent. 

Causality is located in the spot, in 


236. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


reference to the human brain, that 
the horns of animals are grown, from 
their brains. The prying capacity 
of these organs is, in some particu¬ 
lars, the same as those of the horns 
of animals. The old cow will pry 
open a fence to eat the plants in an 
adjoining field. The human being 
will use these organs of causality to 
pry open a problem, to get its con¬ 
tents. The activity of the organ is 
produced by a current of electricity 
sweeping around these corners of the 
brain. The activity is never great in 
the head of a person whose nerves 
and circulation are not active. 

The faculty of examining the caus¬ 
es of all operations that are observed, 
is produced by the effect of the or¬ 
gans of seeing. The organs of caus¬ 
ality are so closely connected with' 
the optic organs, that the effect of all 
objects of sight excite these prying 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 237. 


organs to see more. The exercise of 
the reason is the effort of this part of 
the brain to extend the organs of 
sight. 

Human nature is the most compre¬ 
hensive of the organs in the human 
head. It is the germ of the human 
being stamped on a fold of the brain. 
In its aspect can be seen the very pic¬ 
ture of tlie animal from whose exis¬ 
tence the human race known as the 
Angdo Saxon race was derived. A 

o 

photograph of the animal can be seen 
crouched on the front of this fold. Its 
existence there is sure to be the cause 
of all the characteristics of the indi¬ 
vidual. for the animal nature of man 
is the same as the nature of the ani¬ 
mal from whose existence he ob¬ 
tained his origin. 

The organ of color is in that part of 
the brain, at the corner of the eve ? 
where one point of the semicircle of 


238. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


vibrations of the optic nerve has a ter¬ 
mination. It is the one that can per¬ 
ceive the color of the object when the 


eye is open. Only when the eve is 
open can it be of use in this way. 
The halo created around the optic 
nerve, by the influence of the nerve, 
extends quite around the eye brows. 
In this halo is to be detected the 
character of the color, size and form 


of an object seen. These qualities of 
an object are detected by the charac¬ 
ter of the halo they create. When it is 
a light this halo will excite these semi 
cicular order of organs, then the eve- 


brows will be excited and we frown, 
and wrinkle up the muscles over the 
eves and trv to drive awav the 

• i » 

disturbance. In each of these or¬ 
gans the power to detect, what can 
be detected by them, depends solely 
on their size and activity. The local¬ 
ity of the organ enables it to accom- 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 239. 


p!isli the work of this character. The 
one at the corner of the eyebrow can 
look on the colors produced by an 
object. The one next to it can ob¬ 
serve the size of the object, because 
it is in a position to observe it by the 
effect it produces. The one adjoining 
this can observe the form of the object, 
as it is situated, to be affected by 
every part of the object that affects 
the optic nerve. 

The uses of our eyes, so far as sight 
is concerned, are to create these ef¬ 
fects. Beyond the excitement of 

6 


these organs, by the thing seen, there 
is no effect produced on the brain by 
the organs of sight. The faculty of 
observation is all performed on these 
three folds of the brain. The organs 


for producing these effects are the 
eyes and optic nerves. The use of 
the sight is to give us the size, color, 
and form of objects seen. Emotions 


240. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


created by sight are the secondary 
effects of exciting these three organs. 

The affections are effects of electric¬ 
ity as much as the attraction of the 
magnet. In each organization of na¬ 
ture electricity is creating a relation 
of love between itself and other or¬ 
ganizations. 

The cucumber, honeysuckle and 
other vines, as the germ chooses, in 
twining around, meandering and en¬ 
circling its companion, and absorbing 
its electricity, are illustrations of its at¬ 
tractive influence. The assembling 
of vegetable species in groups and 
communities around the world shows 
the affection of plants. The assem¬ 
bling of human creations in commu¬ 
nities is another example of the at¬ 
tractive power of electricity. The 
family circle and the attachment of 
one person for another are other ex¬ 
amples of nature’s law of love. 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 241. 


In all bodies on earth and in the 
sky, in the leaflet and flower, in an¬ 
imals and in humans, and in all op¬ 
erations of the universe this electric 

attraction is always the same. In the 

•/ 

person when in a normal condition, 
the electricity causes all other persons 
to like or dislike. It gives us a sen¬ 
sation to like or dislike those near 

% 

us. 

The sensation is pleasant or un¬ 
pleasant and the influence is all that 
can be discovered of the affections. 
It is the electricity people exert upon 
us that makes us think we are in love 
with them. In every organization this 
is felt to some extent. The plant is 
no exception. The explanation that 
these affections in persons are caused 
by the appearance, beauty t|iialifica- 
tions, and the like, and create a sort 
of rapture of the senses, is not fixed 
on a foundation or commencement. 


242. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION 


The most beautiful affection of 

mother and child is the interchange 

of their currents of electricity. In 

»■ 

every condition of life this electric 
•/ 

affection is assured by the wav the off- 

•/ • 

spring is brought into existence. 

Every pleasure is caused by elec¬ 
tricity in our bodies. It produces the 
pleasant sensation, emotion, kiss, 
smile, and the delightful affections. 
In the cause of the pleasant sensation 
of a kiss can be found the explana¬ 
tion of the sensation of love or affec¬ 
tion. The teeth are constructions of 
the nerves that terminate in them. In 
each tooth there is a discharge of 
electricity in all directions. In escap¬ 
ing it builds up whiskers and hair un¬ 
der the noses of the males and an oc¬ 
casional female. The nerves of wo¬ 
men are generally too small for this 
accomplishment. 

In discharging this electricity from 


GROWTH AND REPAIR OF THE HUMAN BODY. 243. 


the face over the rows of teeth these 
nerves entice the cooperation of the 
opposite sex in creating the funny 
phenomena called kissing. The cur¬ 
rents will be exchanged and when felt 
the experiment is usually repeated. 
When in a condition for creating 
a constant union of these currents, 
both sexes are apt to cultivate this 
exchange of electricity. 

The pleasures and sorrows of life, 
strength and happiness, sickness and 
weakness, depend upon the measure 
of electricity in the body. Its pres¬ 
ence accomplishes the grandest re¬ 
sults; its absence, pain and wretched¬ 
ness. 

Its absence from any portion of 
the body causes pain. Replenishing 
the current removes the pain. A rub¬ 
bing with hot water, alcohol, or dilut¬ 
ed ammonia will generally open the 
pores and restore the current. Its 


244. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


absence from the brain will cause pain 
in the head. A contraction of the 
muscles is to cause a supply to how 
to the brain. Any great excitement 
of the brain will cause sorrow and 
pain. 




PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANATIONS AND THE 245 . 

HUMAN SOUL. 


VII. 


PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANA¬ 
TIONS AND THE HUMAN 

SOUL. 


.V phantom creation of a plant or 
animal organization, developed in its 
growth, is a counterpart to the plant 
or animal organization that decays. 
Every portion of the plant or animal 
is given a perfect copy of itself in the 
creation that is eliminated at the 
death of the plant or animal. These 
copies are like the originals except 
more refined, and without the means 



246. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


of greater development. They are 
without life because they have no 
current of electricity. The animal 

t 

emanation is without consciousness 
because without life. It is without 
life because the circulation and degree 
of development are not sufficient to 
cause all parts of the plant, or animal, 
to commence to decay immediately, 
and sufficiently rapid, to allow the 
whole emanation to be, at once, at¬ 
tracted by the current in the atmos- 
phere. The reason these emana¬ 
tions are not qualified to accompany 
the human sold through its unlimited 
existence is because thev are without 
the current of life. 

The existence of these creations 
from the death and decay of plants 
and animals is absolutely necessary 
for the commencement of human life. 
This is seen in the plan of continual 
improvement of organized matter in- 


PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANATIONS AND THE 247. 

HUMAN SOUL. 

to life. It is true in the entire devel¬ 
opment of nature, from the whirling 
condensing mass of electric fluid that 
was condensed into the earth and 
planetary creations, to the creation of 
the human soul. 

Plant souls are used in forming 
crystals and animals and to create a 
sphere around the earth at a point 
where the atmosphere will just sus¬ 
tain them. 

Crystals are plant souls, or parts 

of them, clothed with a substance in 

the form of very fine dust. It is so 

«/ 

fine that it is almost opaque, with a 
glitter from its surface when in crys¬ 
tal. All primary crystals are plant 
cells flattened on two sides by depres¬ 
sion and covered by a verv fine dust. 
The character of the substance fur¬ 
nishing the dust which is attracted to 
the plant soul, determines the form of 
the crystal. A coarse dust or finest 


248 LAW. OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


sand will form a nearly round crystal. 

t J %J 

A dust of metal, which is nearly gas, 
will form a crystal of six or eight sides, 


called rhombic or octahedral in form. 

Arsenic is a good illustration. A 

stone or gravel in a bladder, gall or 

kidney is another. It is formed by 
• • 

the attraction of the ashes of the blood 
to a soul of a cell or corpuscle. It is 
cured by a couple of doses of common 
baking soda a day for a month, and 
good air and exercise. 

Crystals afford salts and other sub- 

t 

stances in an imperishable form. Wa¬ 
ter attracted to the plant soul and 
crvstalized bv cold, shows the form of 


the plant as seen in the frosting on 
wi ndows. 

A cloud is vapor attracted to these 
objects. A moving cloud is scatter¬ 
ing vapor along their surfaces. When 
clouds are barely a haze a glimpse 
can be obtained of the form of these 


PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANATIONS AND THE 

HUMAN SOCJL. 


249. 


objects with a good magnifying glass, 
by carefully observing the spots of 


vapor. 



is an advanced condition of the earth. 
It is a consequence of all prior devel¬ 
opments of creation. 


Animal souls are used in construct- 
ing this sphere. A part of the ema¬ 
nations from larger animals are used 


in the creation of human beings. 

A current of the earth is sweeping 
from out the earth to the poles from 
the equator. In the variations* of the 
current that comes from the warmer 
portions of the earth is the cause of 
the wind changing from a southerly 
to a northerly direction, and the re- 
verse, south of the equator. . All over 
the earth where it is open and giving 
growth to plants, this current escapes. 
The velocity of the current of electric- 
ity that causes the change of these 

t 


250. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


winds decomposes the useless phan¬ 
toms from insects, and the more de¬ 
graded animal organizations, causing 
what is called molecular motion. 

The strengthening from a north 
wind in a cold country felt upon com¬ 
ing from a warm atmosphere, before 
the cold stings the ear, is the. in¬ 
creased electricity caused by the de- 
composition of these nitrogen gas 
copies of plant and animal life. With¬ 
out their decomposition in winter the 
atmosphere would not afford the 
breath of life. 

In the attraction of a plant or ani¬ 
mal soul to a womb or eu«' there is a 
contraction of the object. Its pass¬ 
age to this organ is like the bladder 
absorbing the waste ashes and fluids 
of the body. 

The bladder contains water, ashes, 
alkali, ammonia, and the acid of the 
system. These substances are at- 


PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANATIONS AND THE 251. 

HUMAN SOUL. 

tracted into the vacancy of the inter¬ 
ior through the pores of the organ. 

There is a similarity between the 

t 

development of the plant and the 
sonl of the plant. Corn is a state of 
development from a crinoid. The 
blossom of a crinoid is as much like 
the tassel of corn as its substance will 
permit. Allowed to grow in a warm¬ 
er atmosphere and richer soil, it will 
produce a thistle. An increase of 
rich soil and warm atmosphere pro¬ 
duces successively corn, sugar cane, 
and banana. The lionev of the this- 
tie blossom is of the same taste as the 
sweet of the sugar cane. 

The plant soul is as incapable of 
bearing fruit as the crinoid. But the 
animal female gives it a condition 
enabling it to bear fruit in the shape 
of an organization like itself. Upon 
this animal creation decaying another 
fruitless emanation is produced, like 


252 LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


that from the plant except in form. 
This through the influence of the hu¬ 
man female is caused to bear fruit 
like herself in organization. The 
emanation from this organization is 

Cl 

as fruitless as that from the animal. 
Upon the decay of this organization 
an object like the one from which it 
originated is produced, except in form 
and capacity of life. 


This organization is the human 
soul. The human body was organ- 

» Ci 

ized to become the mould for this • 
delicate and glorious organization. 

In every human head and in every 
cell of the body there is a portion of 
the human soul. The progressive 
steps in the development of nature are 
for the preparation of a life beyond 
what is called death. 

A record of the experience of the 
mind is kept. It can be employed 
when desired. The memory of any 


PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANATIONS AND THE 253 

HUMAN SOUL. 


operation of the mind, of any fact, ob¬ 
ject or past event, is a look at a por¬ 
tion of this record. On a port ion of 
the soul itself this record of the mind 
is made and kept. A person in great 
mental excitement has an instantane¬ 
ous observation of this record of his 
past life. 


When we are twin2; to recollect 
anything we close the eyes and cause 
considerable blood to gather in the 
brain. If it does not appear at once, 
a hand is put to the forehead and the 
head lowered. If this fails both hands 
are placed upon the forehead with the 
ends of the fingers over the center of. 
the brain. Still not recollecting what 
is desired we get up and continue 
walking till the portion of the record 
wanted is seen. 


These movements are to create an 
excitement of the brain and increase 
its electricity to light up this record 


254. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


of a mind’s experience as it is lighted 
up in a great fear. It is the mind’s 
increased electric light. 

Memory is the lighting up of this 
record or picture gallery by this cur¬ 
rent of electricity thus generated, 
which connects the whole brain with 
this judgement record of a child of 
God; and bv which the child of God 
is to be judged in another existence. 

The gallery is the stamping of ev¬ 
ery idea and thought of a person on 
the condensing electricity in the 
chambers or cells of the brain called 
ventricles. In these greatest cells of 
the body the unemployed current of 

electricity of the brain is constantly 
• » 

consolidating. Here our thoughts are 
recorded. 

Upon the deposits of oceans from 
the washings of continents which con¬ 
solidate in the beds and strata, are 
impressed the forms of the plants and 


PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANATIONS AND THE 255. 

HUMAN SOUL. 

animals of the periods in which such 
deposits were made. On its con¬ 
densed strata are stamped the effects 
of the universe. This stamping 
the consolidation of the sand and 
mud, settled in the ventricles of the 
globe, with the forms of plants and 
animals, is analogous to stamping 
of the consolidations of the current of 

electricity in the ventricles of the 
%) 

brain with the effects of objects upon 
the decomposing brain. 

The copying of man’s mental acts 
is unavoidable. This life record will 
lie considered by him and those in his 
presence in the world after death. In 
using this gallery of thoughts or the 
data of the mind’s experience we 
are conferring with a portion of the 
soul itself. 

The ventricles of the brain are 
empty after death. The brain cells 
and the cells of the body contain no 


256 LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


substance. Without the current of 
electricity every organ and portion 
of the bodv contracts and shrinks. 

• I . 

A hair taken from a dead bodv is 
contracted and changed in character. 
In each cell and hair something is 
wanting. Something seems to be ab- 
sent when a person is in a coffin. A 
withdrawal of something from the 
room is often experienced at the time 
the breath of life leaves the bodv. 
The entire organization will soon dis¬ 
integrate and decay. 

A careful examination of the cells 
and tissues of a dead person will show 
a cleaving from the inner surfaces of 
a character like detaching a delicate 
substance. This has been discovered 
in the cells of plants. The withdrawal 
in the human being is at the time its 
current of electricity is transferred to 
the thing withdrawn. 

The nitrogen gas copies or linings 


PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANATIONS AND THE 257. 

HUMAN SODL. 

of the cells and corpuscles of the body 
adhere together and form the soul or 
spirit of the human body which con¬ 
stitutes the thing withdrawn. 

The commencement of the withdraw¬ 
al is over a pore. It decreases in size. 
A blood vessel commences at the 
heart and decreases, except one ar¬ 
tery which passes to the head and 
back to the heart again. A nerve 
has its commencement at the base of 
the brain and decreases to the end of 
its branches. 

The escape of the current of elec- 
tricity of each hollow organ passes 

* i 

the souls of cells to the great ends of 
the organs. To a small extent they 
pass through the walls of these cells. 

The membrane of all parts of the 
body, made of corpuscles of blood, 
are wrapped around the organs. It 
preserves their form. This membrane 
is a covering of consolidated electric- 


258. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


tv, generated bv a slight amount of 
decomposition of the bundles of cor¬ 
puscles or glands. Around every 
atom of the glands, bones, and parts 
of the body composed of corpuscles 
or decomposed marrow, is an imper¬ 
ceptible covering. It is the soul of 
the object. The soul of the whole or¬ 


gan is these unperceived coverings 
of atoms of substance, not given an 
existence by growth of cells in the 


organization. All the atoms possess 
this immortal part of their existence. 

Every decomposing object on the 
globe is given a soul in the same wav. 
A human body after the original soul 
is gone, will construct a copy of it¬ 
self by its decomposition, which will 
exist for a period. A soul of this 
character upon any inanimate and 
decomposing object, is the cause of a 
clairvoyant or psychological observa¬ 
tion of the past experience of the ob- 


PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANATIONS AND THE 259. 

HUMAN SOUL. 

ject. The unseen connections of the 
object will possess a history which a 
spiritual sight can perceive. 


in all the cell linings and the un- 


o 


observable coverings of the cells of 


the glands, and other metamorphic 
parts of the body, a soul is construct¬ 
ed. Every part of it passes out of 
, the body at the death of the person. 
The soul is this more refined part of 
the body. Its substance is the so 
called nitrogen gas, or a substance 


precisely the same. 

A soul can pass through any other 
substance and at the same time allow 


any other substance to pass through 
it without harm to either. . Two cur¬ 
rents crossing or operating in differ¬ 
ent directions over the same wire is 
of this character. 

Remember, these cell linings con¬ 
stitute nitrogen gas. It is described 
as colorless, tasteless, and odorless, 


260. LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


resisting every effort to liquefy it; 
lighter than atmosphere and will not 
unite directly with anv other single 
element. No less than six tons of air 
pass through an average sized iron 
blast furnace every hour. The oxygen 
part of the air, is most active in form¬ 
ing combinations. The nitrogen in 
the same heat and contact, emerges 
as it entered, uncombined. 

The human soul is attracted to the 
atmosphere by the earth's current 
from the surface of the nerves at the 
base of the brain and through the 
brain and skull. It passes upon the 
current to the region of the other 
spirit objects. The whole cavalcade 
of such objects is the spirit world or 
heaven above; the dwelling place for 
the soul, spirit or angel. 

The plan and network of photo¬ 
graphing in nature, is so complete 
and systematic, that, in a degree, the 


PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANATIONS AND THE 261. 

. HUMAN SO CL. 

heaven or spirit world can be ed- 
scribed. It is a perfect copy of all 
things of earth immediately over all 
countries of any considerable civila- 
zation. It is photographed upon the 
last stratum of atmosphere surround¬ 
ing the earth. A' student of photog¬ 
raphy in Alaska has lately succeeded, 
without knowing it, in copying from 
it, the city of Montreal or some other 
like city. The soul of a person, who 
passes out of this life, is attracted to 
the spirit sphere by the Almighty’s 
power of attraction, with which • He 
commenced the solar system. 

A human spirit can come to the 
earth bv its own will. The mind of 
the human spirit is the same current 
of electricity that was in the brain 
and nerves of the mortal body. The 
current that was in the other parts of 
the body is the spirit's current of 
power. 


262. 


LAW, OK PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


Names of things and organizations 
are quite immaterial in this world’s 
economy. The truth of things and 
organizations is the material part 
You may call this spiritualism. I call 
it naturalism. The difference between 
spiritual and material creations is in 
refinement. In the spiritual spheres 
more forces and realities of nature 
exist than in the more gross and ob¬ 
servable orders of existence. 

Every spirit is constructed in the 
organization from which it is emanat¬ 
ed to the atmosphere. It is a part 
of the organization. Man is upon 
earth to do the best he can for him¬ 
self and those around him. The pur¬ 
pose of a human body is its use in 
preparing a human soul or spirit to 
meet the creator. 

A spirit or soul is always at a good 
work. The will or corruption for bad 
work is cleared away by death. And 


PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANATIONS AND THE 263. 

HUMAN SOUL. 

as we have borne the image of the 
earthly, we shall also bear the image 
of the heavenly. The development 
of the human brain corresponds to 
the strength of the current of electric¬ 
ity that constitutes the mind of the 
spirit or human soul. The strength 
of this current of mind of the mortal 
and spirit is measured by the charac¬ 
ter of plant and its degree of develop¬ 
ment that was the origin of the ani¬ 
mal; of the character and develop¬ 
ment of the animal that was the ori¬ 
gin of the human; by the develop¬ 
ment, care and strength of the moth¬ 
er; the care, associations and environ¬ 
ments of the child; and the spirit 
teaching and control of the person 
bv the spirit people from the cradle 
to the emanation of the human soul 
from the body. This most impor¬ 
tant part of the development of na¬ 
ture is described by Paul, 1 Cor., xv: 
35 - 55 . 


264 LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION, 


Old settled communities have as 
many assemblies of people as there 
are domestic animals that gave them 


their origin. The brain obtains facts 

o 

bv the senses. In no other way are 
• • 

facts acquired by the person's own 
will. The habits of the weak minded 
are like those of some animal. This 
is only following the animal propen¬ 
sities. The de gree of intelligence is 

O u 

measured by the increase of the folds 

t J 

and electricity of the brain. The 
general plan of development and con¬ 
trol of people is through a spirit’s 


love for a mortal. The giving of a 
fact by a spirit to a mortal is stamp¬ 
ing the fact from the mind of the 
spirit upon the mind of the mor¬ 
tal. This is done by a current of 
mind extending from one being to 
the other; generally without the mor¬ 


tal’s knowledge. If there was a gen¬ 
eral plan of teaching mortals without 


PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANATIONS AND THE 265. 

HUMAN SOUL. 

the intervention of spirit control, 
there would be no accounting for the 
diversity of intelligence among peo¬ 
ple of apparently the same brain. 

The cells of plants and animals 
cannot attract the current of electric¬ 
ity in them as the cells of a human 
being attract the current in the body 
and, therefore, have no life or con¬ 
sciousness. The substance is the 
same. If the blood of the animal or 
the fluid of the plant would yield the 
soul at the moment of death it would 
possess life. 

The blood and fluid are so full of 
substance that attract the linings of 
the cells that they are not attracted 
away from the organization till it is 
partly decayed. The more perfect 
decomposition of the corpuscles in 
the human blood causes the human 
soul to be released at the death of 
the human body. The difference in 


266. 


LAW. OK PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


the circulation of the plant, animal 
and human being, and the difference 
in the character of their substance is 
seen in the circulation itself and the 
production from it. 

An animal's blood will produce hair, 
feathers, bristles, wool or shell for a 
covering. A plant only bark. A 
human blood, a delicate skin and 

small amount of hair both of the same 
substance. Only a few scattering 
hairs are produced except over the 
bones having marrow. Each hair is 
a small volcano over a pore of the 
skin. The undecomposed parts of 
the marrow construct hair and bone. 

The possession of a brain, which in 
some respects is derived from the 
animal origin, is the cause of the hu¬ 
man being copying the animal, to 
some extent. The animal's brain 
causes its characteristics. They are 
repeated in the human being by the 


PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANATIONS AND THE 267. 

HUMAN SOUL. 

adaptation of the cells of the animal 
brain. 

_ \ 

The traits of the plant are inherited 
by the animal, and the traits of the 

animal are inherited by the human 
being. The more developed the 

plant and animal the nearer per¬ 
fect the human being;. The birth of 

O 

a human being is giving the world a 
creation that was in it twice before. 
When he is conscious of a familiarity 
with a condition of things or of ob¬ 
jects, never seen in his human life, 
lie is reviewing his career when on 
earth before. 

A community where a penitentiary, 
jail, poor house, brothel or insane 
asylum cannot lie found, will be one 
where all vicious and worthless brutes 
have been removed for some time. 
A change of soil causes a change of 

(Z? 

plants. A particular species of plants 
are required to sustain certain species 


268. 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


of animals. A change of plants 
causes a change of animals in time. 

The native born inhabitants of 
every community can be divided into 
the same number of classes that there 
are animals as large or larger than a 
cat or domestic fowl. Their different 
characteristics and appearances, if 
selected into groups, will be nearly 
as marked, to an experienced eye, as 
the flock of sheep and herds of cattle, 
horses and hoys. 

Cause of sex is in the plant’s degree 
ot development. As the vapor of 
the atmosphere became exhausted for 
spontaneous animal production, plants 
became more developed in the circu¬ 
lation of their power of growth. Un¬ 
til we find the exudations or blisters 
of gum on the pine, hemlock or fir, 
and in a warmer climate, the sap of 
the maple and other like tree milk 
producing perennial plants, and after- 


PLANT AND ANIMAL EMANATIONS AND THE 

HUMAN SOUL. 

ward a fruit bearing plant, animals 
were sexless. 

A clearing of warm vapor in the 
atmosphere and the scum of the wa¬ 
ter, used as a womb for spontaneous 
generation of animals, required repro¬ 
ductive capacities in animals. The 
increased circulation of blood and ac¬ 
cumulation of corpuscles caused the 
ovaries and breasts of the female as 
the increased circulation of electricity 
of the plants caused the exudation of 
its cells in an attempt to bear fruit. 

The fruit bearing plant and the 
fruit bearing animal are like develop¬ 
ments in nature. The development 
of the male is an attempt to bear fruit 
or have female capacities. The sex 
of human beings is determined by 
the sex of the animal soul attracted 
by the human mother. The changing 
of its organs and organization, in the 
plan of creation, accomplishes the 


270. 


LAW, OB PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


form of the embryonic human being. 
An intelligent examination of the 
foetus, in every stage of its growth, 
will prove all here stated. 

When all of a kind of plants, be¬ 
come fruit bearing, that species is de¬ 
stroyed. When a sex of an animal 
species is destroyed the species die 
out. The electric current of affection 
creates a net work of photographing, 
or stamping influence among plants, 
which is transmitted to animals and 
from animals to human beings. 

The cause of the disposition or 
features of the father or mother in 
the offspring, and the transmission of 
the peculiarities and diseases of the 
ancestry of the parent to the offspring, 
will be found in what has been stated. 


CONCLUSION. 


271. 


CONCLUSION. 


You are asked to consider what 
has been stated as a single problem. 
It is the greatest of all problems, an 
analysis of creation. It commenced 
with a mass of constantly condensing 
plastic, fluid electricity, and stopped 
with the operations .of the soul of 
man in the heaven or spirit world. 

A consideration of the varied de¬ 
grees of progressive development of 
all natural affairs, between this com¬ 
mencement and end, has been made. 

Electricity, or what is so called, in 



272 . 


LAW, OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


this manifold work lias been followed, 

and is, I believe, as the hand of God 

in all things; the basic fluid and 

assent of creation. I ask you to ex- 

amine with candor and care. As 

nearly as possible, step outside of the 

recollection that you have ever been 

•/ 

in the world. 

Be not deterred bv my obscurity, 
or any thing in the past. Men are 
as nothing. Truth is mighty and 
will prevail. As the truth of any 
stated proposition flashes to your 
mind, be not afraid to, acknowledge 
it as vou do your own being;. Do 
not allow yourself to be turned from 

t/ 

the examination by any cloud of op¬ 
pressive fear. 

All things are possible. The great¬ 
est development in an understanding 
of the truth of nature has been, at its 
time, but a stepping stone to still 
greater. If the inventive genius of 


CONCLUSION. 


273. 


man had stopped with Franklin’s ex¬ 
periment with the kite, in the electric 
storm, we would have no street cars 
running by the force of electricity. 

The time, labor, and expense used 
in attempting to fasten upon the mind 
of man that these natural affairs can¬ 
not be known, applied in an intelli¬ 
gent examination with microscope 
and telescope with a common sense 
view, would have solved the mystery 
long ago. We have allowed the 
number of long words, useless books, 
quack nostrums, and a mystic suppos¬ 
ition of greatness of men called scient¬ 
ists, and others, to darken our vision 
of the truth. Too many of them may 
be interested in keeping the people 
in ignorance of the plain and simple 
truth of God’s nature. 

When the people, not interested in 
maintaining the errors they are pay¬ 
ing so dearly for learning, commence 


274. 


LAW. OR PHOTOGRAPHS OF CREATION. 


understanding, the oppressor will be 
compelled to open the cloud of error 
and allow the truth to shine through. 
It is for your own good you are asked 
to examine the solutions of these 
mysteries of nature. 

In examining a problem supposed 
to be exceptionally difficult, we look 
too high and far away. When it is sol¬ 
ved the key is found near our feet. 
We exclaim, how wonderful, yet how 
simple, are the ways of nature and 
of God. 

To prove anything in nature is to 
understand it. After I have created 
upon the cells or folds of your brains 
the pictures of the objects and opera¬ 
tions in nature, I have, you compare 
them with other similar pictures. If 
you find my pictures correct, I have 
made the proof. If you find them in¬ 
correct, I have failed. In which case, 
to do right, you will inform me of 


CONCLUSION. 


275. 


my error. This will be reasoning to¬ 
gether. If the explanation is not as 
stated, please to tell me where is 
truth. 

The solutions of the grand affairs 
of nature discussed in these pages 
are a peaceful satisfaction to my 
mind, as I believe they will be to all 
who shall candidly consider them. 



) 




s 












































